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Cation-exchange characteristics of Amazon River suspended sediment and its reaction with seawater
Authors:Frederick L Sayles  Paul C Mangelsdorf
Institution:2. Department of Chemistry, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, MA 02543, U.S.A.;3. Department of Physics, Swarthmore College, Swarthmore, PA 19081, U.S.A.
Abstract:The cation-exchange characteristics of Amazon River suspended sediment have been studied in order to determine the contribution of exchangeable cations to the geochemical fluxes from the river. Sediment samples were obtained throughout most of the Amazon Basin. The range of exchangeable cation compositions is very narrow in the river and in seawater as well. In river water, the exchangeable cation complement (equivalent basis, exclusive of H+) is 80% Ca2+, 17% Mg2+, 3% Na+ plus K+. In seawater Na+ and Mg2+ are about equal (38%) while Ca2+ ~ 15% and K+ ~ 9%.On reaction with seawater, river suspended sediment took up an amount of Na+ equal to nearly one-third of the dissolved river load, as well as amounts corresponding to 15–20% of the dissolved fluvial K+ and Mg2+. These estimates reflect an unusually high suspended-sediment:dissolved-solids ratio of 6.4 at the time of sampling. At a more representative world average ratio of four, the uptake of Na+ would be 20% of the dissolved fluvial load, and that for K+ and Mg2+ about 10%. Over the annual cycle of the Amazon, it is estimated that ion exchange has a still smaller effect, as a consequence of the low average suspended-solids:dissolved-solids ratio of 1.7.Variations in the ratio XCaXMg, the equivalent fraction of exchangeable Ca2+ and Mg2+, throughout the river, can be described by a single isotherm. This same isotherm accurately describes the distribution of exchangeable Ca2+ and Mg2+ on sediment equilibrated with seawater, despite that a high proportion of exchange sites is occupied by Na+ and K+.
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