Geogenic groundwater solutes: the myth

被引:10
|
作者
Wood, Warren W. [1 ]
机构
[1] Michigan State Univ, Dept Earth & Environm Sci, 288 Fram Lane,Room 207, E Lansing, MI 48824 USA
关键词
Groundwater solutes; Atmospheric deposition; Hydrochemistry; ATMOSPHERIC DEPOSITION; EOLIAN TRANSPORT; POTASSIUM; CALCIUM; NITRATE; SABKHA; SODIUM; ORIGIN; BASIN;
D O I
10.1007/s10040-019-02057-1
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
What is the source of geogenic (natural or native) solutes in groundwater? The orthodox explanation suggests it is largely a function of water-rock interaction (weathering of the soil zone and aquifer mineral framework). It is proposed herein that atmospheric deposition (combination of wet and dry aerosols from ocean spray, smoke, volcanoes, continental dust, and lightning) is a significant source, and in many cases the dominant source, of the major and minor geogenic solutes in groundwater. Solute mass-balance analyses suggest that much of the mass of major and minor ions must be transported into the aquifer from an external source. Example case studies are presented: analysis of groundwater in a coastal marine aquifer located in an arid area (United Arab Emirates) suggests that over 50% of several major ions potentially originate from atmospheric deposition; in an alluvial fan in a semi-arid system (High Plains, USA), 100% of most solutes potentially originate from atmospheric deposition; and in a humid glacial aquifer system (Michigan, USA), 20-30% of many major ions are potentially from atmospheric deposition. These observations contrast with many hydrogeologic textbooks, which still propose the origin to be water-rock interaction-hence, the myth.
引用
收藏
页码:2729 / 2738
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Geogenic fluoride and arsenic in groundwater of Sri Lanka and its implications to community health
    Chandrajith, Rohana
    Diyabalanage, Saranga
    Dissanayake, C. B.
    [J]. GROUNDWATER FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT, 2020, 10
  • [32] Geogenic and anthropogenic contamination in river water and groundwater of the lower Cauvery Basin, India
    Keerthan, Lingaiah
    RamyaPriya, Ramesh
    Elango, Lakshmanan
    [J]. FRONTIERS IN ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE, 2023, 11
  • [33] Geogenic sources and chemical controls on fluoride release to groundwater in the Independence Basin, Mexico
    LaFayette, Gabrielle N.
    Knappett, Peter S. K.
    Li, Yanmei
    Loza-Aguirre, Isidro
    Polizzotto, Matthew L.
    [J]. APPLIED GEOCHEMISTRY, 2020, 123
  • [34] Geogenic fluoride and arsenic in groundwater of Sri Lanka and its implications to community health
    Chandrajith R.
    Diyabalanage S.
    Dissanayake C.B.
    [J]. Chandrajith, Rohana (rohanac@pdn.ac.lk), 1600, Elsevier B.V. (10):
  • [35] Constraining Geogenic Sources of Boron Impacting Groundwater and Wells in the Newark Basin, USA
    Rddad, Larbi
    Spayd, Steven
    [J]. HYDROLOGY, 2024, 11 (07)
  • [36] Sources of ammonium enriched in groundwater in the central Yangtze River Basin: Anthropogenic or geogenic?
    Liang, Ying
    Ma, Rui
    Nghiem, Athena
    Xu, Jie
    Tang, Liansong
    Wei, Wenhao
    Prommer, Henning
    Gan, Yiqun
    [J]. ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION, 2022, 306
  • [37] Toxicity Issues Associated with Geogenic Arsenic in the Groundwater–Soil–Plant–Human Continuum
    A. L. Juhasz
    R. Naidu
    Y. G. Zhu
    L. S. Wang
    J. Y. Jiang
    Z. H. Cao
    [J]. Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology, 2003, 71 : 1100 - 1107
  • [38] Forward and backward location probabilities for sorbing solutes in groundwater
    Neupauer, RM
    Wilson, JL
    [J]. ADVANCES IN WATER RESOURCES, 2004, 27 (07) : 689 - 705
  • [39] A FIELD EXPERIMENT ON GROUNDWATER TRANSPORT OF HALOGENATED ORGANIC SOLUTES
    MACKAY, DM
    FREYBERG, IL
    GOLTZ, MN
    HOPKINS, GD
    ROBERTS, PV
    [J]. ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 1983, 186 (AUG): : 134 - ENVR
  • [40] HYDROPHILIC ORGANIC SOLUTES AS TRACERS IN GROUNDWATER RECHARGE STUDIES
    MALCOLM, RL
    THURMAN, EM
    AIKEN, GR
    AVERY, PA
    [J]. ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 1979, (APR): : 8 - 8