GEOCHEMISTRY OF HALOGENS IN THE MILK RIVER AQUIFER, ALBERTA, CANADA

被引:74
作者
FABRYKAMARTIN, J
WHITTEMORE, DO
DAVIS, SN
KUBIK, PW
SHARMA, P
机构
[1] Kansas Geological Survey, University of Kansas, Lawrence
[2] Department of Hydrology and Water Resources, University of Arizona, Tucson
[3] Nuclear Structure Research Laboratory, University of Rochester, Rochester
关键词
D O I
10.1016/0883-2927(91)90044-P
中图分类号
P3 [地球物理学]; P59 [地球化学];
学科分类号
0708 ; 070902 ;
摘要
Analytical data are presented for Cl, Br and I on a regional scale for the Milk River aquifer. The three halides show strikingly similar spatial distributions and are highly correlated. Concentrations are low in the freshwater portions of the aquifer but increase by as much as two orders of magnitude along the margins. However, halide ratios reach nearly constant values moving down-gradient, suggesting the dominance of a common subsurface source for these ions. Ratios of Cl/I and Cl/Br are less than those of seawater and fit an origin derived from the diagenesis of organic matter in the sediments. Halide ratios rule out leakage and/or diffusion from the underlying Colorado Group as a major influence on the chemistry; the favored hypothesis is altered connate seawater diffusing from low-permeability units within the Milk River Formation as the primary source of salts. This hypothesis of an internal source has important implications for solute sources in other aquifers affected by saline waters because it does not require the importation of a distant fluid. The I-129/I ratio has a meteoric value in groundwater collected near the recharge area, but ratios for downflow waters are only 8-70% of this value. Due to the 16 Ma half-life of I-129, these data indicate that most of the increase in dissolved I cannot derive from concentration of a meteoric source by ion filtration, but must have a subsurface origin. Concentrations of I-129 produced in situ by spontaneous fission of U-238 attain measurable levels only in the oldest waters sampled (ages greater-than-or-equal-to 10(5) a), in which it may account for nearly 90% of the total dissolved I-129 concentration. Water ages based upon Cl-36/Cl data range up to 2 Ma if uncorrected for any dilution by subsurface sources of dead Cl. if one assumes that the subsurface contributions of Cl contribute at least 90% of total Cl in the distal portion, then the Cl-36-based ages are reduced to approximately 1 Ma, somewhat greater than those estimated by hydrodynamic modeling.
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页码:447 / 464
页数:18
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