Radium isotopes are known to be excellent geochemical tracers for study of oceanographic processes. We show here that radium isotopes can also be used to assess adsorption/desorption and transport processes in rivers. The Yellow River (Huanghe), one of the longest, most turbid and heavily regulated rivers in the world, is used as an example. We first investigated the temporal and spatial behavior of radium isotopes (Ra and Ra) in the lower reaches of the river, and found that this zone displayed some of the highest known riverine radium concentrations and fluxes in the world. Suspended particulate matter (SPM) is shown to be the dominant factor controlling radium activities. Laboratory simulation experiments showed that radium desorption from SPM obeys an exponential relationship in fresh water (S = 0). When salinities are >10, the increase in radium concentration follows a linear increase with respect to the amounts of SPM added. Significantly higher radium concentrations (3-5 times), especially for short-lived Ra, were observed during the "Water-Sediment Regulation Scheme" (WSRS), an annual management event when ∼15%-55% of the annual water discharge and ∼30%-75% of the annual sediment load are released from a reservoir to control sedimentation in the Yellow River. The radium fluxes during WSRS periods (∼2 weeks long) accounted for more than half of the entire annual load during the periods studied. Sediment erosion and pore water release are also thought to be important processes supplying radium to the river. After a WSRS, Ra desorption from SPM increases and becomes the prevailing process.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2018.09.058DOI Listing

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