Title of article :
Identifying sources of stream water sulfate after a summer drought in the Sleepers River watershed (Vermont, USA) using hydrological, chemical, and isotopic techniques
Author/Authors :
Mayer، نويسنده , , B. and Shanley، نويسنده , , J.B. and Bailey، نويسنده , , S.W. and Mitchell، نويسنده , , M.J.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Abstract :
In many forested headwater catchments, peak SO 4 2 - concentrations in stream water occur in the late summer or fall following drought potentially resulting in episodic stream acidification. The sources of highly elevated stream water SO 4 2 - concentrations were investigated in a first order stream at the Sleepers River watershed (Vermont, USA) after the particularly dry summer of 2001 using a combination of hydrological, chemical and isotopic approaches. Throughout the summer of 2001 SO 4 2 - concentrations in stream water doubled from ∼130 to 270 μeq/L while flows decreased. Simultaneously increasing Na+ and Ca2+ concentrations and δ34S values increasing from +7‰ towards those of bedrock S (∼+10.5‰) indicated that chemical weathering involving hydrolysis of silicates and oxidation of sulfide minerals in schists and phyllites was the cause for the initial increase in SO 4 2 - concentrations. During re-wetting of the watershed in late September and early October of 2001, increasing stream flows were accompanied by decreasing Na+ and Ca2+ concentrations, but SO 4 2 - concentrations continued to increase up to 568 μeq/L, indicating that a major source of SO 4 2 - in addition to bedrock weathering contributed to peak SO 4 2 - concentrations. The further increase in SO 4 2 - concentrations coincided with an abrupt decrease of δ34S values in stream water SO 4 2 - from maximum values near +10‰ to minimum values near −3‰. Soil investigations revealed that some C-horizons in the Spodsols of the watershed contained secondary sulfide minerals with δ34S values near −22‰. The shift to negative δ34S values of stream water SO 4 2 - indicates that secondary sulfides in C-horizons were oxidized to SO 4 2 - during the particularly dry summer of 2001. The newly formed SO 4 2 - was transported to the streams during re-wetting of the watershed contributing ∼60% of the SO 4 2 - during peak concentrations in the stream water. Thereafter, the contribution of SO 4 2 - from oxidation of secondary sulfides in C-horizons decreased rapidly and pedogenic SO 4 2 - reemerged as a dominant SO 4 2 - source in concert with decreasing SO 4 2 - concentrations in spring of 2002. The study provides evidence that a quantitative assessment of the sources of stream water SO 4 2 - in forested watersheds is possible by combining hydrological, chemical and isotopic techniques, provided that the isotopic compositions of all potential SO 4 2 - sources are distinctly different.
Journal title :
Applied Geochemistry
Journal title :
Applied Geochemistry