TY - JOUR
T1 - Sediment transport to the Arctic Ocean and adjoining cold oceans
AU - Hasholt, Bent
AU - Bobrovitskaya, Nelly
AU - Bogen, Jim
AU - McNamara, James
AU - Mernild, Sebastian H.
AU - Milburn, David
AU - Walling, Desmond E.
PY - 2006
Y1 - 2006
N2 - This paper reviews and synthesises available information on sediment transport to the Arctic Ocean and adjoining seas with open contact to the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. Special emphasis is placed on calculation and estimation of the sediment flux from the mostly ungauged high Arctic areas on the American continent, in Greenland, and on islands in the Arctic Ocean, and from Russia. In the absence of reliable information on bedload fluxes for most rivers, attention is directed primarily to suspended sediment loads. By combining available monitoring data and estimates for ungauged areas, the total sediment transport to the Arctic Ocean is estimated to be 324-884 × 106tyr-1. Of this total, a maximum of about 56% can be considered as monitored, while the rest is based on different types of estimate. It is clearly demonstrated that the monitoring network in the high Arctic is inadequate and that there is a lack of knowledge concerning the proportion of the load that actually reaches the sea, as well as bedload.
AB - This paper reviews and synthesises available information on sediment transport to the Arctic Ocean and adjoining seas with open contact to the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. Special emphasis is placed on calculation and estimation of the sediment flux from the mostly ungauged high Arctic areas on the American continent, in Greenland, and on islands in the Arctic Ocean, and from Russia. In the absence of reliable information on bedload fluxes for most rivers, attention is directed primarily to suspended sediment loads. By combining available monitoring data and estimates for ungauged areas, the total sediment transport to the Arctic Ocean is estimated to be 324-884 × 106tyr-1. Of this total, a maximum of about 56% can be considered as monitored, while the rest is based on different types of estimate. It is clearly demonstrated that the monitoring network in the high Arctic is inadequate and that there is a lack of knowledge concerning the proportion of the load that actually reaches the sea, as well as bedload.
KW - Arctic
KW - Arctic Ocean
KW - Glacierized basins
KW - Non-glacierized basins
KW - Sediment fluxes
KW - Sediment transport
KW - Specific sediment yields
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=33845930853&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.2166/nh.2006.023
DO - 10.2166/nh.2006.023
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:33845930853
SN - 0029-1277
VL - 37
SP - 413
EP - 432
JO - Hydrology Research
JF - Hydrology Research
IS - 4-5
ER -