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Chloride imbalance in a catchment undergoing hydrological change: Upper Barwon River,southeast Australia
Institution:1. School of Business and Management, Lappeenranta University of Technology, Skinnarilankatu 34, Lappeenranta FI-53854, Finland;2. Departmento de Ingeniería Química y Procesos de Minerales,Universidad de Antofagasta, Avenida Angamos 601, Antofagasta 1240000, Chile;3. Centro de Investigación Científico para la Minería,CICITEM, Calle Antonio José de Sucre 220, Antofagasta 1240000, Chile;4. Department of Process and Environmental Engineering, Lodz University of Technology, 116 ?eromskiego Street, Lodz 90-924, Poland
Abstract:Documenting whether surface water catchments are in net chemical mass balance is important to understanding hydrological systems. Catchments that export significantly greater volumes of solutes than are delivered via rainfall are not in hydrologic equilibrium and indicate a changing hydrological system. Here an assessment is made of whether a saline catchment in southeast Australia is in chemical mass balance based on Cl. The upper reaches of the Barwon River, southeast Australia, has total dissolved solids, TDS, concentrations of up to 5860 mg/L and Cl concentrations of up to 3370 mg/L. The high river TDS concentrations are due to the influxes of groundwater with TDS concentrations of up to 68,000 mg/L. Between 1989 and 2011, the median annual Cl flux from the upper Barwon catchment was 17.8 × 106 kg (~140 kg/a/ha). This represents 340–2230% of the annual Cl input by rainfall to the catchment. Major ion and stable isotope geochemistry indicate that the dominant source of solutes in the catchment is evapotranspiration of rainfall, precluding mineral dissolution as a source of excess Cl. The upper Barwon catchment is not in chemical mass balance and is a net exporter of solutes. The chemical imbalance may reflect the transition within the last 100 ka from an endorheic lake system where solutes were recycled producing shallow groundwater with high TDS concentrations to a better drained catchment. Alternatively, a rise in the regional water table following land clearing may have increased the input of groundwater with high TDS concentrations to the river system.
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