4.1 Article

Constraining flow paths of saline groundwater at basin margins using hydrochemistry and environmental isotopes: Lake Cooper, Murray basin, Australia

Journal

AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF EARTH SCIENCES
Volume 54, Issue 8, Pages 1103-1122

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/08120090701615741

Keywords

geochemistry; groundwater; Murray Basin; radiocarbon; stable isotopes

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Solutes in saline groundwater (total dissolved solids up to 37 000 mg/L) in the Lake Cooper region in the southern margin of the Riverine Province of the Murray Basin are derived by evapotranspiration of rainfall with minor silicate, carbonate and halite. dissolution. The distribution of hydraulic heads, salinity, percentage modern carbon (pmc) contents, and Cl/Br ratios imply that the groundwater system is complex with vertical flow superimposed on lateral flow away from the basin margins. Similarities in major ion composition, stable (O, H, and C) isotope, and Sr-87/Sr-86 ratios between groundwater from the shallower Shepporton Formation and the deeper Calivil - Renmark aquifer also imply that these aquifers are hydraulically interconnected. Groundwater in the deeper Calivil-Renmark aquifer in the Lake Cooper region has residence times of up to 25 000 years, implying that pre-land-clearing recharge rates were < 1 mm/y. As in other regions of the Murray Basin, the low recharge rates account for the occurrence of high-salinity. groundwater. Shallow (< 20 m) groundwater yields exclusively modern C-14 ages and shows a greater influence of evaporation over transpiration. Both these observations reflect the rise of the regional water-table following land clearing over the last 200 years and a subsequent increase in recharge to 10-20 mm/y. The rise of the regional water-table also has increased vertical and horizontal hydraulic gradients that may ultimately lead to the export of salt from the Lake Cooper embayment into the adjacent fresher groundwater resources.

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