Borup Fiord Pass is a glacier-carved valley on Ellesmere Island in Nunavut, Canada. The valley contains a natural spring which carries fluids from the subsurface to the surface, sometimes passing through the glacial ice in the process. The spring is the only known place where sulfur from a natural spring is deposited over ice.[1] At the Borup Fiord Pass spring, hydrogen sulphide gas in the water is converted to stable deposits of either elemental sulfur, the most common material in the deposit, or gypsum.[1] The process by which hydrogen sulfide becomes sulfur is complex, and most often occurs when microbes, like bacteria, are present.[1]

Satellite image of the Borup Fiord Pass area including Borup Pass spring.
Borup Fiord Pass is located in Nunavut
Borup Fiord Pass
Borup Fiord Pass

To the south the pass leads into Esayoo Bay, part of the Borup Fiord.

References

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  1. ^ a b c "Signs of Life: Sulfur Deposits at Borup Fiord Pass, Canadian Arctic". NASA.

81°00′N 081°40′W / 81.000°N 81.667°W / 81.000; -81.667 (Borup Fiord Pass)