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The hydrochemistry of a semi-arid pan basin case study: Sua Pan,Makgadikgadi, Botswana
Authors:Frank D. Eckardt  Robert G. Bryant  Graham McCulloch  Baruch Spiro  Warren W. Wood
Affiliation:1. Environmental and Geographical Science, University of Cape Town, Rondebosch 7700, South Africa;2. Department of Geography, University of Sheffield, Department of Geography, Winter Street, Sheffield S10 2TN, UK;3. Department of Zoology, University of Dublin, Trinity College, Dublin 2, Ireland;4. Department of Mineralogy, The Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW7 5BD, UK;5. Department of Geological Sciences, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824, USA
Abstract:This study presents results on the fluid and salt chemistry for the Makgadikgadi, a substantial continental basin in the semi-arid Kalahari. The aims of the study are to improve understanding of the hydrology of such a system and to identify the sources of the solutes and the controls on their cycling within pans. Sampling took place against the backdrop of unusually severe flooding as well as significant anthropogenic extraction of subsurface brines. This paper examines in particular the relationship between the chemistry of soil leachates, fresh stream water, salty lake water, surface salts and subsurface brines at Sua Pan, Botswana with the aim of improving the understanding of the system’s hydrology. Occasionally during the short wet season (December–March) surface water enters the saline environment and precipitates mostly calcite and halite, as well as dolomite and traces of other salts associated with the desiccation of the lake. The hypersaline subsurface brine (up to TDS 190,000 mg/L) is homogenous with minor variations due to pumping by BotAsh mine (Botswana Ash (Pty) Ltd.), which extracts 2400 m3 of brine/h from a depth of 38 m. Notable is the decrease in TDS as the pumping rate increases which may be indicative of subsurface recharge by less saline water. Isotope chemistry for Sr (87Sr/86Sr average 0.722087) and S (δ34S average 34.35) suggests subsurface brines have been subject to a lithological contribution of undetermined origin. Recharge of the subsurface brine from surface water including the Nata River appears to be negligible.
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