Evaluation of the flushing rates of Apalachicola Bay, Florida via natural geochemical tracers
Evaluation of the flushing rates of Apalachicola Bay, Florida via natural geochemical tracers
Date
2007-07-10
Authors
Dulaiova, Henrieta
Burnett, William C.
Burnett, William C.
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Abstract
We used naturally occurring radium isotopes as tracers of water exchange in
Apalachicola Bay, a shallow coastal-plain estuary in northwestern Florida. The bay receives
fresh water and radium from the Apalachicola River, and mixes with Gulf of Mexico waters
through four inlets. We deployed moored buoys with attached Mn-fibers at several stations
throughout the estuary during two summer and two winter periods. After deployment for at least
one tidal cycle we measured the ratio of the two short-lived radium isotopes 223Ra (half-life =
11 d) and 224Ra (3.6 d) to estimate “radium ages” of the water in the bay.
During our four seasonal deployments the river discharge ranged from 338 to 1016 m3 s-
1. According to our calculations the water turnover time in the bay during these samplings
ranged from 6 to 12 days. Age contours in the bay showed that winds and tides as well as river
discharge influence the water movement and the residence time of freshwater in the bay. We
also calculated the mean age of river water in the bay which was between 5 to 9 days during the
studied periods. We suggest that this approach can be used to quantify transport processes of
dissolved substances in the bay. For example, soluble nutrient or pollutant transport rates from a
point source could be examined. We conclude that the radium age technique is well suited for
flushing rate calculations in river dominated shallow estuaries.
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Author Posting. © Elsevier B.V., 2007. 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 Marine Chemistry 109 (2008): 395-408, doi:10.1016/j.marchem.2007.09.001.