Spatial variability in sediment composition and evidence for resuspension in a large, deep lake
Marine and Freshwater Research
46(1) 321 - 326
Published: 1995
Abstract
Spatial variability in the composition of sediments in Pyramid Lake, Nevada, was assessed in June 1992 by collecting surficial samples at 32 sites. For those sites, organic fractions were highest in the centre of the lake and low near the single inflow to the system. The spatial patterns for organic C, N, and P in lake sediments indicated that small organic-rich particles are preferentially deposited in the centre of the lake. This sorting of particles by water depth was supported by a corresponding decrease in the particle size distribution of sediments with station depth and by limited sediment-trap data. Further, a comparison of sediment-trap particle flux rates with the net sediment accumulation rate for the centre of the lake based on 210Pb decay indicated that the resuspension of bottom sediments in Pyramid Lake (zmax = 102 m) must occur throughout the lake.
https://doi.org/10.1071/MF9950321
© CSIRO 1995