4.7 Article

The circulation of the Dead Sea brine in the regional aquifer

Journal

EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS
Volume 493, Issue -, Pages 242-261

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.epsl.2018.04.027

Keywords

Dead Sea; Lake Lisan; groundwater circulation; Ca-chloride brine; groundwater dating; paleo-hydrology

Funding

  1. Israeli government under GSI DS project [40573]
  2. United States-Israel Binational Science Foundation (BSF) [2014351]
  3. PALEX project Paleohydrology and Extreme Floods from the Dead Sea ICDP Core - DFG, Germany [BR2208/13-1/-2]
  4. Dead Sea Excellence Center of the Israel Science Foundation [1736/11]

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Ca-chloride brines have circulated between the lakes and the adjacent aquifers throughout the history of the Dead Sea lacustrine-hydrology system. The Ein-Qedem (EQ) hydrothermal saline springs system discharging at the western shores of the modern Dead Sea is the modern manifestation of this essential and continuous process. The EQ springs comprise the most significant source of Ca-chloride brine that currently discharges into the lake. The chemical composition of EQ brine has remained virtually uniform during the past ca. 40 yr, indicating that the brine represents a large groundwater reservoir. The EQ brine evolved from ancient Ca-chloride brine that occupied the tectonic depression of the Dead Sea Basin during the Quaternary. During this period, the composition of lake's brine was affected by mixing with freshwater and formation of primary minerals. Based on chronological and geochemical data, we argue that the EQ brine comprises the epilimnetic solution of last glacial Lake Lisan that penetrated and circulated through the adjacent Judea Group aquifer. C-14 and Kr-81 dating indicates recharge ages spanning the time interval of similar to 40-20 ka, coinciding with the period when the lake reached its highest stand (of similar to 200 +/- 30 m below msl, at similar to 31-17.4 ka) and maintained a stable layered (stratified) configuration for a period of several ten thousand years. The presented evidence suggests that the circulation of the Ca-chloride brine involves penetration into the aquifer during high stands (EQ brine recharge) and its discharge back into the lake during the modern low stands (similar to 400 to 430 m below msl). Accordingly, the mechanism of brine circulation between the lake and the marginal aquifers is related to the long-term hydro-climate history of the Dead Sea basin and its vicinity. (C) 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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