Insights onto Hydrologic and Hydro-Chemical Processes of Riparian Groundwater Using Environmental Tracers in the Highly Disturbed Shaying River Basin, China
Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article › Research › peer-review
Documents
- Insights onto Hydrologic and Hydro-Chemical Processes of Riparian Groundwater Using Environmental Tracers in the Highly Disturbed Shaying River Basin, China
Final published version, 5.27 MB, PDF document
Understanding the hydrologic and hydrochemistry processes in the riparian area is of great importance for managing and protecting riparian water resources. This paper took a highly disturbed and polluted Shaying River Basin (SRB) of China as the study area. In this research, environmental tracers (hydrochemical and isotopic data of(222)Rn, delta O-18, and delta D) and corresponding models (two-component mixing model and(222)Rn mass balance model) were employed to investigate the hydrologic and associated hydro-chemical process of riparian groundwater. The results indicated that rivers received groundwater discharge located at Xihua (J8), Zhoukou (Y1), Luohe (S2), and Shenqiu (SY2), and the mixing extent with groundwater was greater in wet seasons than in dry seasons. The(222)Rn mass balance model showed that the flux of river water leakage was 3.27 x 10(-4)m(3)/(s center dot m) at the front of Zhoukou sluice while groundwater discharge was 3.50 x 10(-3)m(3)/(s center dot m) at the front of Shenqiu sluice during the sampling period. The cation exchange and the dissolution/precipitation of aquifer minerals (including calcite, dolomite, gypsum, and halite) were dominated by geochemical processes. The untreated sewage discharge and fertilizer usage were the main anthropogenic activities affecting the hydrochemistry process in surface water and riparian groundwater. Additionally, our results found that nitrate pollutants derived by riparian groundwater were potential threats to river quality at the lower reaches of Jialu River and Shenqiu county of Shaying River, where the nitrate inputs could be larger during the wet seasons because of higher groundwater discharge.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Article number | 1939 |
Journal | Water |
Volume | 12 |
Issue number | 7 |
Number of pages | 24 |
ISSN | 2073-4441 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2020 |
- hydrochemistry, environmental tracers, radon, riparian groundwater, Shaying River, SURFACE-WATER, STABLE-ISOTOPES, GEOCHEMICAL EVOLUTION, SEMIARID AREA, MASS-BALANCE, RN-222, QUALITY, DISCHARGE, RECHARGE, O-18
Research areas
Number of downloads are based on statistics from Google Scholar and www.ku.dk
ID: 249486607