1. Evaluation of potential impacts of perchlorate in the Colorado River on the Salton Sea, California.
- Author
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Holdren, G., Kelly, Kevin, and Weghorst, Paul
- Subjects
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AMMONIUM perchlorate & the environment , *ROCKET fuel , *GROUNDWATER , *CHEMICAL reduction , *BACTERIAL ecology , *WATER supply - Abstract
Ammonium perchlorate, a component of rocket fuel, entered Lake Mead through drainage and shallow groundwater in the Las Vegas Valley, Nevada, and is now found in the lower Colorado River from Lake Mead to the international boundary with Mexico. Perchlorate is a threat to human health through reduction of thyroid hormone production. Perchlorate has been found in water throughout the lower Colorado system and in crops in the California’s Imperial Valley, as well as in several other states, but it has not previously been included in investigations of the Salton Sea. Because perchlorate behaves conservatively in the Colorado River, it was postulated that it could be accumulating at high levels along with other salts in the Salton Sea. Results show that perchlorate is not accumulating in the Sea, although it is present in tributaries to the Sea at levels similar to those found in the Colorado River. Bacterial reduction of perchlorate is the most likely explanation for the observed results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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