Cite this paper:
Aharon OREN. Limnological instrumentation in the middle of the 19th century: the first temperature and density profiles measured in the Dead Sea[J]. Journal of Oceanology and Limnology, 2015, 33(6): 1496-1504

Limnological instrumentation in the middle of the 19th century: the first temperature and density profiles measured in the Dead Sea

Aharon OREN
Department of Plant and Environmental Sciences, Alexander Silberman Institute of Life Sciences, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Edmond J. Safra Campus, Jerusalem 91904, Israel
Abstract:
The first modern survey of the Dead Sea was performed by the Geological Survey of Israel in 1959-1960, and the report published remains the baseline study for our understanding of the physical and chemical properties of the lake. At the time the Dead Sea was a meromictic lake with a strong salinity gradient separating the deep waters (>40 m depth) from the less saline surface waters. A few results of analyses of deeper water samples collected in the 1930s were reported, but overall we have very little information about the structure of the lake's water column before the 1959-1960 survey. However, it is little known that data on the physical and the chemical structure of the Dead Sea water column were obtained already in the middle of the 19th century, and the information collected then is highly relevant for the reconstruction of the limnological properties of the lake in earlier times. The expedition of Lieutenant William Lynch (U.S. Navy) in 1848 reported the presence of a temperature minimum at a depth of ~18 m, and also retrieved a water sample collected close to the bottom for chemical analysis. In 1864, the French Dead Sea exploration by the Duc de Luynes and his crew yielded detailed density and salinity profiles for a number of sampling stations. The results of these pioneering studies are discussed here, as well as the sampling equipment and measuring instruments used by the 1848 and the 1864 expeditions.
Key words:    Dead Sea|stratification|research history|sampling equipment|self-registering thermometer   
Received: 2014-12-11   Revised: 2015-03-16
Tools
PDF ( KB) Free
Print this page
Add to favorites
Email this article to others
Authors
Articles by Aharon OREN
References:
Anati D A, Stiller M, Shasha S, Gat J R. 1987. Changes in the thermo-haline structure of the Dead Sea: 1979-1984.Earth Planet. Sci. Let., 84 (1): 109-121.
Anati D A, Stiller M. 1991. The post-1979 thermohaline structure of the Dead Sea and the role of double-diffusive mixing. Limnol. Oceanogr., 36 (2): 342-354.
Anati D A. 1997. The hydrography of a hypersaline lake. In:Niemi T M, Ben-Avraham Z, Gat J R eds. The Dead Sea:The Lake and its Setting. Oxford University Press, New York. p.89-103.
Duc de Luynes (Honoré Théodore Paul Joseph D'Albert, duc De Luynes). 1871-1877. Voyage d'Exploration à la Mer Morte, à Petra et sur la Rive Gauche du Jourdain. Oeuvre Posthume Publiée par ses Petits-Fils sous la Direction de M. le comte de Vogüé. Vol. I, II, III, Atlas, Arthus Bertrand, Paris.
Elazari-Volcani B. 1940. Studies on the Microflora of the Dead Sea. Ph. D. Thesis, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Hebrew. 119p.
Hall J K, Neev D. 1978. The Dead Sea Geophysical Survey 19 July-1 August 1974. Final Report no. 1: Methods, navigation, bathymetry and magnetics. Geological Survey of Israel, Marine Geology Division, Report no. MG/1/78. 21p.
Hall J K. 1996. Digital topography and bathymetry of the area of the Dead Sea depression. Tectonophysics, 266 (1-4):177-185.
Hall J K. 1997. Topography and bathymetry of the Dead Sea depression. In: Niemi T M, Ben-Avraham Z, Gat J R eds.The Dead Sea: The Lake and its Setting. Oxford University Press, New York. p.11-21.
Jampoler A C A. 2005. Sailors in the Holy Land: The 1848American Expedition to the Dead Sea and the Search for Sodom and Gomorrah. Naval Institute Press, Annapolis. 312p.
Klein C. 1961. On the Fluctuations of the Level of the Dead Sea since the Beginning of the 19th Century. Hydrological Paper no. 7, The Israel Hydrological Service, Jerusalem. 83p.
Klein C. 1982. Morphological evidence of lake level changes, western shore of the Dead Sea. Israel J. Earth Sci., 31:67-94.
Kreiger B. 1997. The Dead Sea: Myth, History, and Politics.Brandeis, Hanover. 228p.
Lartet L. 1866. Recherches sur les variations de salure de l'eau de la mer Morte en divers points de sa surface et à différentes profondeurs, ainsi que sur l'origine probable des sels que entrent dans sa composition. Bull. Soc. Géol.Fr ance, XXIII: 719-760.
Lartet L. 1869. Essai sur la Géologie de la Palestine et des Contrés Avoisinantes telles que l'Égypte et l'Arabie.Comprenant les Observations Recueillis dans le Cours de l'Expédition du duc de Luynes à la mer Morte. Annales des Sciences Géologiques. Masson, Paris. 292p.
Lynch W F. 1849a. Narrative of the United States' Expedition to the River Jordan and the Dead Sea. Lea and Blanchard, Philadelphia. 508p.
Lynch W F. 1849b. Report of the Secretary of the Navy: With a Report Made by Lieutenant W. F. Lynch of an Examination of the Dead Sea. United States Navy Department, Washington D. C. 88p.
Lynch W F. 1852. Official Report of the United States'Expedition to Explore the Dead Sea and the River Jordan, by Lieut. W. F. Lynch U. S. N. John Murphy & Co., Baltimore. 235p.
Neev D, Emery K O. 1967. The Dead Sea: Depositional Processes and Environments of Evaporites. State of Israel, Ministry of Development, Geological Survey, Jerusalem. 147p.
Nissenbaum A. 1970. Chemical analyses of Dead Sea and Jordan River water, 1778-1830. Israel J. Chem., 8 (3):281-287.
Oren A, Anati D A. 1996. Termination of the Dead Sea 1991-1995 stratification: biological and physical evidence.Israel J. Earth Sci., 45: 81-88.
Oren A. 2003a. Physical and chemical limnology of the Dead Sea. In: Nevo E, Oren A, Wasser S P eds. Fungal Life in the Dead Sea. A R G Gantner Verlag, Ruggell. p.45-67.
Oren A. 2006. Two and a half centuries of qualitative and quantitative chemical analyses of Dead Sea water. Israel J. Chem., 46 (1): 69-77.
Oren, A. 2003b. The history of the physical, chemical and biological exploration of the Dead Sea. In: Nevo E, Oren A, Wasser S P eds. Fungal Life in the Dead Sea. A R G Gantner Verlag, Ruggell. p.9-25.
Production of Minerals from the Waters of the Dead Sea. 1925.Reports, etc., Relating to Preliminary Investigations, 1923-1925. Published on behalf of the Government of Palestine, by the Crown Agents for the Colonies, 4, Millbank, S. W. 1., London. 47p.
Steinhorn I, Assaf G, Gat J R, Nishri A, Nissenbaum A, Stiller M, Beyth M, Neev D, Garber R, Friedman G M, Weiss W. 1979. The Dead Sea: deepening of the mixolimnion signifies the overture to overturn of the water column.Science, 206 (4414): 55-57.
Copyright © Haiyang Xuebao