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Elsevier, Chemical Geology, (357), p. 164-177, 2013

DOI: 10.1016/j.chemgeo.2013.08.035

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Geochemical and hydrological processes controlling groundwater salinity of a large inland wetland of northwest Australia ☆

Journal article published in 2013 by Grzegorz Skrzypek ORCID, Shawan Dogramaci, Pauline F. Grierson ORCID
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

Understanding mechanisms of hydrochemical evolution of groundwater under saline and brine wetlands in arid and semiarid regions is necessary to assess how groundwater extraction or injection in large-scale basins may af-fect the natural interface between saline–fresh aquifers in those systems. We investigated the evolution of groundwater of the Fortescue Marsh, a large inland wetland of northwest Australia that is mainly supplied by floodwater from the upper Fortescue River catchment. The marsh is located in the Pilbara region, one of the world's major iron ore provinces, where mining activities often occur below water tables. Here, we quantified the stable isotope and chemical composition of groundwater, surface water and rainfall in and around the marsh to better understand how saline marshes and playa lakes function geochemically, hydrologically and eco-logically. The deep groundwater (N50 m depth) of the Fortescue Marsh is highly saline (N 100 g L −1), whilst shallow groundwater (~0–20 m depth) and surface water are mainly fresh or brackish. Currently, the marsh is mainly recharged by occasional floodwater. Consequently, salt in the marsh is concentrated by evaporation of rainfall. We expected that the hydrochemical composition of surface and groundwater would therefore reflect the chemical composition of rainwater. We analysed 206 water samples for stable isotope composition (δ 2 H, δ 18 O) and water chemistry, including: pH, dissolved oxygen, electrical conductivity (EC), and total dissolved solids (TDS), as well as Na, Ca, Mg, K, Si, Fe, HCO 3 , SO 4 , Cl, Sr and Br. We then developed geochemical models and a salt inventory to estimate the geological time of salt accumulation and to decouple geochemical character-istics of salt from modern groundwater. We found that groundwater associated with the marsh can be divided into two distinct groups that are characterised by their stable isotope compositions; i) fresh and brackish ground-water (TDS b10 g L −1 ; δ 18 O −8.0 ± 0.9‰) and ii) saline and brine groundwater (TDS N 10 g L −1 , δ 18 O varies from +2.5 to −7.2‰). Fresh groundwater was evaporated by b 20% compared to rainwater. Brackish water mainly reflects modern recharge whilst saline and brine groundwater reflects mixing between modern rainfall, brackish water and relatively old groundwater. The Cl load in the groundwater originates from rainfall and accu-mulates over time as it is recycled due to precipitation of evaporates and re-dissolution on the marsh during sub-sequent flooding events. The stable isotope composition of the deeper brine groundwater also suggests a complex evolution, which cannot be explained by evaporation under current conditions from modern rainfall. We thus conclude that the deeper brine groundwater under the Fortescue Marsh developed under a different cli-matic regime and that the current salt in the marsh has accumulated over at least 40,000 years, but could have been as long as 700,000 years.