Glaciers
are retreating across the Canadian Rocky Mountains. As this ice volume
is lost, trace elements, nutrients, and other contaminants, accumulated
from millennia of atmospheric deposition, are subject to release in
glacier meltwater with uncertain consequences for downstream water
quality. We monitored and modeled meltwater chemistry at a high temporal
resolution using a combination of grab sampling and sondes at the
mouth of proglacial Sunwapta River, which drains the Athabasca Glacier
in the Canadian Rocky Mountains. Two chemically and temporally distinct
sources to melt were distinguished by principal component analysis:
a component with a long subglacial residence time characterized by
dissolved carbonate-associated elements, and a supra- and englacial
component with short subglacial residence time, which contained potential
legacy trace elements at low total concentrations and predominantly
in a particulate form (total mercury, <3.2 ng/L; total lead, arsenic,
and chromium, <2.0 μg/L) and legacy nutrients at moderate
concentrations (nitrogen, <0.22 mg/L; phosphorus, <0.03 mg/L).
Trace element fluxes and yields were modeled by pairing grab sampling
results with correlated high-frequency conductivity or turbidity.
Mercury yield (3.2 g/year/km2) was comparable to or lower
than yields from other glacial meltwater streams globally. Long-term
discharge data suggests that future contaminant yields will increase
until peak water is reached, but at present, glacial meltwater does
not significantly augment downstream nutrient and trace element contaminant
budgets.