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General Groundwater Chemistry

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Groundwaters are recharged by surface precipitation either locally (unconfined ... Mammoth Cave. Developed in Mississippian Girkin and St. Genevieve limestones ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: General Groundwater Chemistry


1
General Groundwater Chemistry
2
Groundwater
  • Occurs in the saturated zone below the
    groundwater table

(Vadose Zone)
(Phreatic Zone)
3
Groundwater
  • Some groundwaters are isolated from direct
    atmospheric contact by an aquitard.

4
Groundwater
  • Groundwaters are recharged by surface
    precipitation either locally (unconfined
    aquifers) or remotely (confined aquifers)

5
Groundwater
  • Time in the groundwater system may be hours,
    days, weeks, months, years, decades, centuries,
    or millennia.
  • Dependent upon
  • rock/sediment properties such porosity and
    permeability
  • Depth and distance of transport
  • During the time in the groundwater system, the
    water can react with the rock/sediment.

6
Groundwater
7
Groundwater
8
Groundwater
9
Groundwater
10
Groundwater
  • Controls on water chemistry in the unsaturated
    (vadose) zone
  • Ingorganic reactions
  • Gas dissolution and redistribution
  • CO2 H2O ? H2CO3
  • H2CO3 ? HCO3- H
  • HCO3- ? CO32- H
  • Weak acid strong base reactions
  • CaCO3 H ? Ca2 HCO3-
  • Albite ? Kaolinite
  • Cation exchange
  • Precipitation-dissolution of gypsum
  • CaSO42H2O ? SO42- Ca2 2H2O
  • Sulfide oxidation
  • 4FeS2 15O2 14H2O ? 4Fe(OH)3 16H 8SO42-

11
Groundwater
  • Controls on water chemistry in the unsaturated
    (vadose) zone
  • Organic reactions
  • Dissolution of organic matter at the ground
    surface
  • Complexation of Fe and Al
  • Sorption of organic-metal compounds
  • Oxidation of organic compounds
  • CH2O O2 ? CO2 H2O energy

12
Groundwater
  • Controls on Chemistry in the saturated (phreatic)
    zone
  • Weak acid strong base reactions
  • Carbonate minerals H ? cations HCO3-
  • Silicate minerals H ? cations H4SiO4
  • Aluminosilicates H ? cations H4SiO4 clays
    and iron oxide/hydroxides
  • Dissolution of soluble salts
  • Halite NaCl ? Na Cl-
  • Anhydrite CaSO4 ? SO42- Ca2
  • Gypsum CaSO42H2O ? SO42- Ca2 2H2O
  • Sylvite KCl ? K Cl-
  • Redox reactions
  • Cation exchange reactions

13
Groundwater
14
Groundwater
  • Salt dissolution in western Oklahoma

15
Groundwater
  • Controls on Chemistry in the saturated zone
  • Controls on Redox reactions
  • Oxygen content of the recharge water
  • Pass through organic rich soil or fractures
  • Distribution and reactivity of organic matter and
    other potential reductants is the aquifer
  • organic matter in rock/sediment
  • Presence of hydrocarbons
  • Distribution of potential redox buffers in the
    aquifer
  • Particularly MnO2, Fe(OH)3, and Fe2O3
  • Circulation rate of the groundwater
  • Longer residence time, more chances to work down
    redox ladder
  • Isolation from direct atmospheric input
  • Time in contact with sediment/rock
  • Function of depth and distance from recharge area
    as well as rock/sediment porosity and
    permeability
  • Types of sediment and/or rock the water passes
    through

16
Water Chemistry and Rock Type
17
Groundwater Chemical Evolution Example
18
Groundwater Chemical Evolution Example
19
Weathering and Water Chemistry
  • Classic case study II Igneous rock weathering
    and Spring water composition
  • Garrels and McKenzie (1967) reviewed in Drever
    (1997)
  • Ephemeral and perennial springs in the Sierra
    Nevada
  • Basic Assumptions
  • Water compositions result from attack by carbonic
    acid on silicate minerals
  • Plagioclase feldspar is the sole source of Na
    and Ca2 because it is abundant and readily
    weathered.
  • No calcite present.
  • Dissolved silica is derived primarily from
    weathering of plagioclase with minor Fe-Mg
    minerals

20
Weathering and Water Chemistry
  • The general model
  • Snow melt is primary water source
  • Need to remove dissolved components from snow

21
Weathering and Water Chemistry
  • Ephemeral Springs
  • Sourced by CO2-charged rainwater
  • The following weathering reactions accounted for
    virtually all of the dissolved constituents
  • Plagioclase to kaolinite (by far the most
    important)
  • 80 of rock-derived constituents
  • Biotite to kaolinite
  • K-feldspar to kaolinite
  • No significant dissolution of quartz

22
Weathering and Water Chemistry
  • Perennial Springs
  • Sourced by deeper, older waters in that have
    equilibrated with the rocks
  • Higher concentrations of ions and dissolved
    silica
  • Lower SiO2Na ratio than ephemeral springs
  • The following weathering reactions accounted for
    virtually all of the dissolved constituents
  • Plagioclase to kaolinite
  • Biotite to kaolinite
  • Plagioclase to smectite (to account for lack of
    silica)
  • Dissolution of calcite (needed to balance
    reactions)
  • Source of Ca2 and HCO3-

23
Carbonate Groundwater Chemistry
  • Carbonate-rock aquifers include some of the most
    important and prolific aquifers for groundwater
    supply
  • Edwards aquifer central Texas
  • Floridian aquifer Florida and southern Georgia
  • These aquifers are unique in that they exhibit a
    high solubility of the aquifer framework
  • Controls the water chemistry
  • Dissolution controls the landscape - karst

24
Carbonate Groundwater Chemistry
25
Carbonate Groundwater Chemistry
  • Karst aquifers
  • Recharge occurs by
  • direct transfer from the surface to the saturated
    zone
  • Slow infiltration through the vadose zone
  • Chemistry differences reflect complex
    interactions between
  • Recharge
  • Storage
  • Flow

26
Carbonate Groundwater Chemistry
  • Flow varies from
  • Intergranular flow
  • Tubulent flow through large open conduits

27
West-Central Kentucky Example
  • Mammoth Cave
  • Developed in Mississippian Girkin and St.
    Genevieve limestones
  • Most of the cave in the vadose zone
  • Over 300 miles long
  • Overlain by units containing perched aquifers or
    confining beds
  • Because of short flow path and residence times,
    water flowing from springs in the Haney Fm. Are
    undersaturated with respect to calcite

28
West-Central Kentucky Example
29
West-Central Kentucky Example
  • Where water reaches the dry cave passages,
    sulfate minerals (incl. gypsum) are precipitated
    on the cave ceilings.
  • Vadose water enters the cave from the side of
    karst valleys
  • Along fractures undersaturated w/calcite
  • After passing through soil oversaturated
    w/calcite
  • Drip waters form stalactites and stalagmites
  • Groundwater that continues through the conduit
    system remains undersaturated as it exits the
    cave as base level springs

30
Carbonate Aquifers
  • Similar to broad models of flow (Shuster and
    White, 1972) developed for PA carbonate aquifers.
  • Diffuse flow system
  • Relatively constant hardness through year
  • Generally at or near saturation for calcite,
    undersaturated in summer
  • Exhibits constant year-round temperature
  • Conduit flow system
  • Large seasonal variation in hardness
  • Undersaturated with calcite
  • Exhibits strong seasonal variation of temperature
  • Both systems exhibit a strong seasonal variation
    in pCO2

31
Deep Carbonate Aquifer Example
  • Deeper aquifers may have a significantly
    different water chemistry from shallow aquifers
  • Central Kentucky karst region (Scanlon, 1989)
  • Three groundwater types
  • Ca-Mg-HCO3- Type
  • Most common
  • Greatest amount of seasonal variation
  • Shortest residence time of the three types
  • Na-HCO3- Type
  • Results from ion exchange with interbedded shales
  • Na-Cl Type
  • Also developed due to ion exchange with shales

32
Deep Carbonate Aquifer Example
33
Deep Carbonate Aquifer Example
  • As the water exited the aquifer at springs, the
    water re-equilibrated with the atmosphere
  • Degassing of CO2
  • As water makes its way downstream it continues to
    lose CO2
  • Water in stream becomes saturated with calcite
  • No precipitation until stream flows over a
    waterfall 1km from spring
  • Agitation and turbulence causes rapid degassing
    of CO2 raising saturation index above critical
    point for precip.
  • Travertine precipitates on everything in contact
    with water
  • Rocks, twigs, leaves, etc.
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