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letters to
nature Nature 380, 612 - 614 (1996);
doi:10.1038/380612a0
Large groundwater
inputs to coastal waters revealed by 226Ra
enrichments Willard S. Moore
THE flow of ground
water directly into the coastal ocean has been studied previously by in
situ measurements, seep meters and diffusion gradient
models1. Although these techniques provide ample evidence that
such flows occur, they do not provide a means of quantifying the
groundwater flux on a regional scale. Here I report large enrichments of
226Ra in coastal waters of the South Atlantic Bight, and
demonstrate that groundwater discharge is the main source of the
226Ra surplus. Using 226Ra data for brackish ground
waters with estimates of residence times of nearshore waters, I conclude
that the groundwater flux to these coastal waters must be about 40% of the
river-water flux during the study period. Besides Ra, other metals,
nutrients and organic compounds are expected to be enriched in brackish
ground waters, so these findings require an upward revision of terrestrial
fluxes of dissolved materials to these coastal waters, and perhaps a
re-evaluation of such fluxes to the global ocean. These fluxes may be
sensitive to hydrological factors, groundwater usage, dredging and
sea-level change. |