The origin of solutes in groundwater in a hyper-arid environment: A chemical and multi-isotope approach in the Atacama Desert, Chile.

Sci Total Environ

Grup MAiMA, SGR Mineralogia Aplicada, Geoquímica i Geomicrobiologia, Departament de Mineralogia, Petrologia i Geologia Aplicada, Facultat de Ciències de la Terra, Universitat de Barcelona (UB), c/ Martí Franquès s/n, 08028 Barcelona, Spain. Electronic address:

Published: November 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates the ion and isotopic composition of groundwater in northern Chile's hyper-arid Atacama Desert to trace the sources of solutes, revealing a diverse composition influenced by local geology and atmospheric dust.
  • - Groundwater types vary in isotopic ratios and salinity, indicating strong interactions with three main geological units: Paleozoic rocks, Jurassic marine limestones, and Atacama Gravels, each contributing distinct isotopic signatures.
  • - Isotopic analysis shows that atmospheric dust significantly affects groundwater composition, while the consistent δB values suggest that isotopic fractionation does not occur significantly along the groundwater flow path.

Article Abstract

The major ion and the multi-isotopic composition (Sr/Sr, δB, δS(SO) and δO(SO)) of groundwater from the Central Depression in northern Chile is investigated to identify the origin of groundwater solutes in the hyper-arid core of the Atacama Desert. The study area is between the Cordillera de Domeyko and the Central Depression, at latitudes 24-25°S, and is characterized by near-zero air moisture conditions, rare precipitation and very limited runoff. Groundwater composition varies from Ca-HCO to Ca, Na-SO type below elevations of 3400 m a.s.l. The rCl/rBr ratio of meteoric waters and groundwater overlap, but significantly increase in the aquifer as salinity goes up due to evapoconcentration far from the Domeyko Cordillera. The wind-displaced dust originating in the Central Depression (Sr/Sr: 0.706558-0.710645; δS(SO): 0 to +4‰) affects the precipitation composition in the highest parts of the Domeyko Cordillera (Sr/Sr: 0.706746-0.709511; δS(SO): +1 to +6‰), whose δS(SO) and δB values are greatly different from marine aerosols, discarding its contribution to dust at this distance inland. Sr and S isotopic values in groundwater indicate a strong relation with three main geological units: i) Paleozoic rocks contribute high radiogenic strontium isotope ratios to groundwater (0.707011-0.714862), while sulphate isotopic composition is probably acquired from atmospheric dust (>- 1.4‰), ii) Jurassic marine limestones contribute low-radiogenic strontium isotopic ratios to groundwater (<0.70784), while sulphate can be related to oxidized sulphides that change the isotopic signatures of sulphur (<-1.2‰), and iii) mixed salts in the Atacama Gravels contribute lower radiogenic strontium isotopic ratios and sulphate to groundwater (Sr/Sr: <0.707324; δS(SO): +0.1 to +7.7). These three processes reflect water-rock interactions. The δB of groundwater generally up to +13‰, does not increase along the regional groundwater flow path, discarding fractionation by interaction with clays. These results improve the understanding of the groundwater evolution in hyper-arid systems through a new conceptual model.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2019.06.356DOI Listing

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