4.6 Article

In situ evaluation of nearshore marine and fresh pore water transport into Flamengo Bay, Brazil

Journal

ESTUARINE COASTAL AND SHELF SCIENCE
Volume 76, Issue 3, Pages 473-483

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecss.2007.07.045

Keywords

groundwater seepage; radon; sulfur hexafluoride; sediment-water exchange; advection; recirculated seawater

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Transport between pore waters and overlying surface waters of Flamengo Bay near Ubatuba, Brazil, was quantified using natural and artificial geochemical tracers, Rn-222, Cl-, and SF6, collected from multi-level piezometers installed along a transect perpendicular to the shore. Eight sampling ports positioned along the length of the piezometers allowed sampling of pore waters at discrete depth intervals from 10 to 230 cmbsf (centimeters below seafloor). Small volume samples were collected from the piezometers using a peristaltic pump to obtain pore water depth profiles. Pore water Rn-222 is deficient in shallow sediments, allowing application of a diffusion-corrected Rn-222 exchange rate. This model estimates the magnitude of pore water exchange rates to be about 130-419 cm/day. An SF6-saturated fluorescein dye tracer was gently pumped into deep pore waters and exchange rates estimated from this method range from 29 to 185 cm/day. While absolute rates are higher using Rn-222 than SF6, rates are of similar magnitudes and the trends with distance from shore are the same-flow is greatest 6 m from shore and decreases by more than 50% further offshore. A Cl- mass balance indicates the greatest fraction of fresh SGD occurs along an apparent preferential flow path in sediments within 5-7 m of the shoreline (87%). Recirculating bay waters through sediments dominate pore water advection at 10 m offshore where only 4% of the flow can be attributed to a freshwater source. Both fresh and marine sources combine to make up submarine groundwater discharge to coastal water bodies. The magnitude of fresh aquifer discharge is often a spatially variable and minor component of the total discharge. (C) 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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