Tracing terrestrial salt cycling using chlorine and bromine
Abstract
Understanding and quantifying terrestrial salt cycling is central
to scientific fields such as sedimentary geology, mineral
exploration, water resources, palaeontology, atmospheric
chemistry and limnology. Dissolved chlorine and bromine
concentrations have been utilised for decades as individual
tracers or as a ratio to trace geochemical processes in saline
environments. The stable isotope variations of these two elements
have also been found to be useful for understanding and
quantifying geochemical processes. However, both hydrogeochemical
techniques could benefit from being applied in new environments
and the collection of further data on a local and continental
scale, as well as developing quantitative methods to provide
further value to their use. This thesis presents findings based
on theoretical analysis, large-scale monitoring and a targeted
field investigation to improve the understanding of how chlorine
and bromine can be utilised as tracers of terrestrial salt
cycling.
Firstly, bench-top salt dissolution experiments were used to
verify a previously established quantitative mixing model that
utilises chloride/bromide ratios to correct chloride- or
bromide-based tracer methods for other chloride sources. The
results show that the model can predict the percentage of
alternate salt sources accurately after analytical and endmember
uncertainties are considered. The results are used to extend the
understanding of the uncertainties and sensitivities of the
mixing models, providing scientists with a guide to which
environments and scenarios the mixing model would be most
appropriate. The mixing model correction provides a useful and
cheap method for scientists to improve their use of chloride- or
bromide-based tracer techniques in catchment studies.
Secondly, a continental-scale dataset of wet deposition
compositions spanning six and half years was analysed to identify
spatial and temporal trends in chloride/bromide ratios. A
recently developed imputation algorithm was applied to estimate
the high proportion of censored bromide values, as well as the
other eight analytes, based on the multivariate relationships of
nine analytes. Chloride/bromide ratios of wet deposition decrease
with distance inland following a logarithmic regression. The
observations provide further confidence in the findings presented
in previous studies that have shown that chloride/bromide ratios
systematically decrease with increasing distance from the coast.
Lastly, chlorine and bromine tracer techniques were applied in a
case study of the Lake George Basin, NSW, to trace modern salt
cycling proximal to a saline lake, and to investigate how
hydrogeochemical signatures can elucidate palaeohydrologic
processes. The Lake George Basin was chosen as the field site
because of its long, near-continuous sequence of Cenozoic lake
sediments, and its complex salt cycling regime. The chlorine- and
bromine-based tracer methods, in combination with other
geochemical information, have provided a better understanding of
the modern salt cycling regime within the catchment, and have
also provided useful constraints on the timing of the recession
of the mega-lake that existed in the basin during the last
glacial maximum. This study also illustrated the utility of
chlorine- and bromine-based tracer methods to delineate salt
cycling processes in saline lake environments.
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