Hydrochemistry of snow and glacier-fed surface waters in the Gokyo Valley, Nepal: A Pre and Post Earthquake Assessment
Abstract
To investigate the impacts of the 2015 earthquakes on water quality and resources in the Gokyo Valley, drinking water samples were collected in the Khumbu region of Nepal in early 2016 and compared to baseline data from November 2012. This study was part of a larger USAID funded project housed at the National Snow and Ice Data Center to understand Contributions to High Asian Run-off from Ice and Snow (CHARIS) which has more than 10 local partners across 8 countries in High Asia. The Gokyo Valley is home to the Ngozumba Glacier and the Gokyo Lakes, which serve as the headwaters to the Dudh Koshi River. Samples were collected from tributary streams, which serve as the local drinking water sources and contribute to the Dudh Koshi watershed, along a transect from Lukla, 9181 ft, to Gokyo, 15, 557 ft. Water samples were analyzed in the field with the Aquagenx, Compartment Bag Test, a low cost method to detect E.coli, an indicator bacteria of fecal contamination. E.coli was present at the lowest elevations. Water samples were also shipped back to CU-Boulder for further chemical analysis including dissolved organic carbon (DOC), total dissolved nitrogen (TDN), arsenic, and oxygen isotopes to identify changes in hydrologic flow paths. These samples are being analyzed over the summer of 2016. Snow samples were also collected along a transect from Namche Bazaar at 11,657 ft to Gokyo Ri at 17,500 ft and have been analyzed for refractory black carbon (rBC). In general, rBC concentrations decreased with increasing elevation, except near local point-sources. Impurities like these reduce surface albedo and increase the amount of solar radiation absorbed by snow/ice, leading to enhanced melt.
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2016
- Bibcode:
- 2016AGUFM.H13L1592K
- Keywords:
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- 0740 Snowmelt;
- CRYOSPHEREDE: 1621 Cryospheric change;
- GLOBAL CHANGEDE: 1813 Eco-hydrology;
- HYDROLOGYDE: 1817 Extreme events;
- HYDROLOGY