The Marine Nature of Nuwuk Lake and Small Ponds of the Peninsula of Point Barrow Alaska

Authors

  • John L. Mohr
  • Donald J. Reish
  • J. Laurens Barnard
  • Roger W. Lewis
  • Stephen R. Geiger

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14430/arctic3675

Keywords:

Lakes, Spits (Geography), Tundra ponds

Abstract

Discusses a score or more ponds, some transient, some persistent, on this narrow gravel spit, their location, nature, salinity and temperature; their biotas, marine and fresh-water, are outlined. Nuwuk Lake, the largest water body of the locality, approx. 600 ft long, max. depth 18.5 ft, is treated in some detail: its bottom, its formation by converging currents of the Bering and Chukchi Seas, ice conditions, temperature, salinity and O2-content. The biotas: euryhaline, reduced shallow-sea fauna are dealt with and the organisms collected during 1952-1960 are tabulated. Comparison is made with the few halocline lakes known in northern Russia and Scandinavia, notably Mogil'noye on Kil'din Island.

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Published

1961-01-01