4.5 Article

A multi-isotope (delta D, delta O-18, Sr-87/Sr-86, and delta B-11) approach for identifying saltwater intrusion and resolving groundwater evolution along the Western Caprock Escarpment of the Southern High Plains, New Mexico

Journal

APPLIED GEOCHEMISTRY
Volume 25, Issue 1, Pages 159-174

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.apgeochem.2009.11.004

Keywords

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Funding

  1. US Air Force

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Declining water levels in and and semi-arid regions increase an aquifer's vulnerability to natural and anthropogenic influences. A multi-isotope (delta D, delta(18)0, Sr-87/Sr-86, and delta B-11) approach was used to resolve the geochemical evolution of groundwater in a declining aquifer in a semi-arid region of the southwestern USA as groundwater composition reacts to source-water mixing, cross-formational flow including saltwater intrusion, water-rock interaction, and likely agricultural recharge. Sub-aquifers or local flow systems are present in the Southern High Plains aquifer along the Western Caprock Escarpment in New Mexico, and the study site's local flow system contains a Na-Cl, high dissolved-solids groundwater that flows from the escarpment until it mixes with a high quality regional aquifer or regional flow system. The local flow system contains water that is similar in composition to the underlying, upper Dockum Group aquifer. Saltwater found in the upper Dockum Group aquifer likely originates in the adjacent Pecos River Basin and crosses beneath or possibly through the hydrologic divide of the Western Caprock Escarpment. Strontium concentrations of 0.9-31 mg/L and a Sr-87/Sr-86 range of 0.70845-0.70906 were sufficient to estimate source-water fractions, mixing patterns, and contributions from chemical weathering through mass balance inverse calculations. Boron concentrations (59-1740 mg/L) and delta B-11 values (+6.0-+46.0 parts per thousand) were used to confirm source-water mixing, further evaluate water-rock interaction, and examine the influence of possible agricultural recharge. Alteration of B concentrations and delta B-11 values in an area of likely agricultural recharge indicated the loss of B and decrease in delta B-11 values likely from plant uptake, adsorption. and weathering contributions in the soil/vadose zone prior to recharge. The effectiveness of Sr-87/Sr-86 and delta B-11 for resolving the geochemical influences in groundwater in the Southern High Plains along the Western Caprock Escarpment allowed for the reinterpretation of the isotopic composition of water that has been shown to be highly variable in the Southern High Plains. This study shows the utility of a multi-isotope approach for resolving the geochemical evolution of groundwater in an aquifer that has a complex relationship with underlying aquifers and the applicability of these isotopes as indicators of the alteration of source waters from natural or anthropogenic influences. (C) 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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