Using the Cl/Br ratio as a tracer to identify the origin of salinity in aquifers in Spain and Portugal
Alcalá, Francisco J. | Custodio Gimena, Emilio | Comisión Interministerial de Ciencia y Tecnología, CICYT (España) | CSIC - Instituto Geológico y Minero de España (IGME) | Junta de Andalucía
A study on the applicability of the Cl/Br molar ratio for identifying the origin of groundwater salinity is presented according to the experience gained in Spain and Portugal. Cl/Br ratios in atmospheric bulk deposition have helped to distinguish groundwater in which Cl derives only from atmospheric sources, from groundwater in which Cl is contributed by endogenous, lithological or anthropogenic sources. Considering the seawater Cl/Br ratio of 655 ± 4, Cl/Br ratios may be increased up to 1500 in groundwater by the addition of wastewater loaded with NaCl or leaching of solid waste, and decreased to 300 by the use of Br-based pesticides or leaching farm-animal or septic waste. Leaching and dissolution of natural and industrial NaCl, and of gypsum-rich formations containing some NaCl may yield Cl/Br ratios between one thousand and several thousand, although leaching of potassium halides near salt mines produces Cl/Br ratios below the seawater ratio. When Cl content in groundwater is not affected by extreme evaporation (up to halite saturation at ∼6.2 mol L−1 of NaCl) and if there are no other Cl sources, recharge by rainfall can be estimated by relating Cl in atmospheric bulk deposition to derived groundwater. The Cl/Br ratio appears to be a good tracer for discriminating non-atmospheric Cl contributions to groundwater, provided chemical analyses are accurate, since its variability is not wide. Data have been collected from different areas of Spain and Portugal and are explained and illustrated by two cases described in detail, the Doñana aquifer in southwest Spain and the Canary Islands, both showing the mixing paths.
Показать больше [+] Меньше [-]This research was funded by Spanish CICYT Research Project HID1999-0205, European Research Project EVK1-2002-00527 and Andalusian Research Project P06-RNM-01732, and partially by Geological Survey of Spain (IGME) Research Projects 62669, 63368 and 258. The authors would like to thank the IGME Laboratory and Dr. Lleonard Matía of the AGBAR Laboratory for assessing the first results. Thanks also to the personnel from the IGME, the Groundwater International Centre Foundation (FCIHS) and other institutions that collaborated in sampling and in the further characterization of the results, many of them mentioned in the text. The first author is also grateful to the IGME for a Doctoral Research Grant from June 2001 to December 2004 and to the Spanish Ministry of Education and Science for a “Juan de la Cierva” Programme Contract (JCI-2007-334). T
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