Trace element cycling in a subterranean estuary : part 2. Geochemistry of the pore water
Trace element cycling in a subterranean estuary : part 2. Geochemistry of the pore water
Date
2005-10-17
Authors
Charette, Matthew A.
Sholkovitz, Edward R.
Sholkovitz, Edward R.
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Abstract
Submarine groundwater discharge (SGD) is an important source of dissolved elements to
the ocean, yet little is known regarding the chemical reactions that control their flux from sandy
coastal aquifers. The net flux of elements from SGD to the coastal ocean is dependent on
biogeochemical reactions in the groundwater-seawater mixing zone, recently termed the
"subterranean estuary". This paper is the second in a two part series on the biogeochemistry of
the Waquoit Bay coastal aquifer/subterranean estuary. The first paper addressed the
biogeochemistry of Fe, Mn, P, Ba, U, and Th from the perspective of the sediment composition
of cores (Charette et al., 2005). This paper uses pore water data from the subterranean estuary,
along with Bay surface water data, to establish a more detailed view into the estuarine chemistry
and the chemical diagenesis of Fe, Mn, U, Ba and Sr in coastal aquifers.
Nine high-resolution pore water (groundwater) profiles were collected from the head of
the bay during July 2002. There were non-conservative additions of both Ba and Sr in the
salinity transition zone of the subterranean estuary. However, the extent of Sr release was
significantly less than that of its alkaline earth neighbor Ba. Pore water Ba concentrations
approached 3000 nM compared with 25-50 nM in the surface waters of the bay; the pore water
Sr-salinity distribution suggests a 26% elevation in the amount of Sr added to the subterranean
estuary. The release of dissolved Ba to the mixing zone of surface estuaries is frequently
attributed to an ion-exchange process whereby seawater cations react with Ba from river
suspended clay mineral particles at low to intermediate salinity. Results presented here suggest
that reductive dissolution of Mn oxides, in conjunction with changes in salinity, may also be an
important process in maintaining high concentrations of Ba in the pore water of subterranean
estuaries.
In contrast, pore water U was significantly depleted in the subterranean estuary, a result
of SGD-driven circulation of seawater through reducing permeable sediments. This finding is
supported by surface water concentrations of U in the bay, which were significantly depleted in
U compared with adjacent coastal waters. Using a global estimate of SGD, we calculate U
removal in subterranean estuaries at 20 x 106 mol U y-1, which is the same order of magnitude as
the other major U sinks for the ocean. Our results suggest a need to revisit and reevaluate the
oceanic budgets for elements that are likely influenced by SGD-associated processes.
Description
Author Posting. © The Authors, 2005. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Elsevier B.V. for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 70 (2006): 811-826, doi:10.1016/j.gca.2005.10.019.