Climate change and deglaciation are active processes in current changing environments. In the Central Caucasus region rapid degradation of glaciers is caused often by the formation of superficial blackcolored sediments — cryoconite. Cryoconite plays a crucial role in changing ecosystems and may contribute to the formation of primary soils after glacier retreat. Over the past 20 years, the frequency of mudflows and other dangerous mountain events have increased in the Central Caucasus, which is associated with the glacial retreats. Intensification of tourism results in increasing of traffic, recreational activity and environment contamination. Determination of the cryoconites geochemical properties in comparison with other types of sediments and local soils is crucial for investigation of geochemistry and contamination state of superficial glacial sediments. This environmental aspect is important in terms of the Central Caucasus settlements safety under conditions of deglaciation and anthropogenic influence. The sediments studied (cryoconite, mudflow, moraine) were sampled at Garabashi and Skhelda glaciers as well as some local soils at the Baksan gorge. Sampled materials were investigated in terms of physicochemical and agrochemical parameters. The concentrations of trace elements (Cu, Pb, Zn, Ni, Cd) were also determined and contamination indices (geoaccumulation index — Igeo, contamination factor - CF and degree of contamination — Cdegree) were used to evaluate the pollution status of studied material. Data obtained shows much higher content of organic carbon in soils (up to 7.82%) in comparison with cryoconite (max. 1.63%) due to presence of vegetation, however, the basal respiration values in some cases were similar between сryoconite and soils, indicating high rates of microbial activity in a cryoconite holes. It was found that almost all materials studied have sandy structure. Cryoconite sediments on both of the glaciers are enriched with phosphorus, high values of K2O (max. 298 mg·kg-1) and N-NH4 (max. 247 mg·kg-1) are identified at Garabashi glacier which could be influenced by long-distant transfer but mostly a result of local anthropogenic activity. In case of trace elements, the highest content is identified for Zn (62 mg·kg-1 for cryoconite and 60.5 mg·kg-1 for soils) and the most contaminated materials are cryoconite from Garabashi glacier and Entisols, up to moderate level, which is mostly associated with local anthropogenic activity.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3109-3124
Number of pages16
JournalJournal of Mountain Science
Volume18
Issue number12
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2021

    Research areas

  • Central Caucasus, Contamination, Cryoconite, Entisols, Trace elements

    Scopus subject areas

  • Global and Planetary Change
  • Geography, Planning and Development
  • Geology
  • Earth-Surface Processes
  • Nature and Landscape Conservation

ID: 90697660