Stable isotope and aquatic geochemistry of a typical subtropical karst subterranean stream in southwest China
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Publication Date
May 2017
Abstract
A hydrogeochemical and isotopic study was conducted on the subterranean karst stream, namely the Guancun subterranean stream (GSS). The hydrogeochemical processes of the GSS were controlled through calcite dissolution and precipitation and were driven by the concentration of CO2, which controlled changes in the pH and of PCO2 in the water. The δ18O and δD values of the GSS were within the global meteoric water line and the local meteoric water line, thereby indicating that the water of the GSS comes from precipitation. Certain abnormal δ18O and δD values suggest the effect of evaporation on the GSS given its use in a particular irrigation system, wherein the GSS in transformed into a surface stream and flows for a relatively long time on the surface during the wet season. The δ13CDIC values of the GSS range from −13.5 to −11.3‰ in the dry season and from −13.9 to −9.5‰ in the wet season, thereby indicating that the GSS belongs to a semi-open system. The δ13CDIC values in the GSS were formed by the δ13CDIC values of the soil CO2 and carbonate dissolution at different proportions. According to the simplified mass balance formula, the contributions of carbonate dissolution to the dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) of the GSS were calculated to be 50.2–58.3% and 48.7–64.7% in the dry and wet seasons, respectively, thereby indicating a less than 50% carbonate dissolution contribution during the formation of DIC in karst groundwater. Moreover, sulfuric acid and nitric acid were observed to participate in karst processes.
Keywords
Hydrogeochemistry, Stable Isotopes, Carbonate Dissolution, Dic, Subterranean Karst Stream
Document Type
Article
Notes
Carbonates and Evaporites, Vol. 33, no. 3 (2017-05-16).
Identifier
SFS0044376_00001
Recommended Citation
Zhang, Tao; Pu, Junbing; and Li, Jianhong, "Stable isotope and aquatic geochemistry of a typical subtropical karst subterranean stream in southwest China" (2017). KIP Articles. 4789.
https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/kip_articles/4789