4.8 Article

Isotopic Composition and Origin of Indigenous Natural Perchlorate and Co-Occurring Nitrate in the Southwestern United States

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 44, Issue 13, Pages 4869-4876

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/es903802j

Keywords

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Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Defense [ER-1435, ER-0509]
  2. U.S. Geological Survey

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Perchlorate (ClO4-) has been detected widely in groundwater and soils of the southwestern United States. Much of this ClO4- appears to be natural, and it may have accumulated largely through wet and dry atmospheric deposition. This study evaluates the isotopic composition of natural ClO4- indigenous to the southwestern U.S. Stable isotope ratios were measured in ClO4- (delta O-18, Delta O-17, delta Cl-37) and associated NO3- (delta O-18, Delta O-17, delta N-15) in groundwater from the southern High Plains (SHP) of Texas and New Mexico and the Middle Rio Grande Basin (MRGB) in New Mexico, from unsaturated subsoil in the SHP, and from NO3--rich surface caliche deposits near Death Valley, California. The data indicate natural ClO4- in the southwestern U.S. has a wide range of isotopic compositions that are distinct from those reported previously for natural ClO4- from the Atacama Desert of Chile as well as all known synthetic ClO4-.ClO4- in Death Valley caliche has a range of high Delta O-17 values (+8.6 to +18.4 parts per thousand), overlapping and extending the Atacama range, indicating at least partial atmospheric formation via reaction with ozone (O-3). However, the Death Valley delta Cl-37 values (-3.1 to -0.8 parts per thousand) and delta O-18 values (+2.9 to +26.1 parts per thousand) are higher than those of Atacama ClO4-. In contrast, ClO4- from western Texas and New Mexico has much lower Delta O-17 (+0.3 to +1.3 parts per thousand), with relatively high delta Cl-37 (+3.4 to +5.1 parts per thousand) and delta O-18 (+0.5 to +4.8 parts per thousand), indicating either that this material was not primarily generated with O-3 as a reactant or that the ClO4- was affected by postdepositional O isotope exchange. High Delta O-17 values in ClO4- (Atacama and Death Valley) are associated with high Delta O-17 values in NO3-, indicating that both compounds preserve characteristics of O-3-related atmospheric production in hyper-arid settings, whereas both compounds have low Delta O-17 values in less arid settings. Although Delta O-17 variations in terrestrial NO3- can be attributed to mixing of atmospheric (high Delta O-17) and biogenic (low Delta O-17) NO3-, variations in Delta O-17 of terrestrial ClO4- are not readily explained in the same way. This study provides important new constraints for identifying natural sources of ClO4- in different environments by multicomponent isotopic characteristics, while presenting the possibilities of divergent ClO4- formation mechanisms and(or) ClO4- isotopic exchange in biologically active environments.

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