Large Arctic rivers are important suppliers of iron to the Arctic Ocean. However, the sources of Fe-bearing particles in permafrost-dominated systems and the mechanisms driving this supply of Fe are poorly resolved. Here, Fe isotope ratios were used to determine the sources of Fe-bearing particles and colloids in the Lena River and tributaries.
In samples collected after the spring floods, Fe-bearing particles (>0.22 µm) carried ∼70% of the Fe and have isotope ratios that are lower than, or similar to that of the continental crust. These particles are composed of a leachable Fe fraction of largely ferrihydrite, with isotope values of −1.40‰ to −0.12‰, and a fraction of clays and Fe oxides with continental crust values. Co-existing Fe-bearing colloids (