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Temperature-associated changes in groundwater quality.

Authors :
Riedel, Thomas
Source :
Journal of Hydrology. May2019, Vol. 572, p206-212. 7p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

• A relation between groundwater temperature and quality is established. • Soil and groundwater are warming in the studied area. • Warming is associated with changes in groundwater quality. Climate change and urbanization are currently leading to a warming of the subsurface worldwide with yet unforeseen consequences for groundwater quality. The temperature-sensitivity of chemical and biological processes suggests that small temperature changes driven by current warming should have a detectable effect on the ecology of aquifers and the composition of groundwater itself, but field observations covering temperatures that are environmentally relevant are sparse. The analysis of a large data set provides field-scale evidence that, within the naturally occurring temperature range between 5 and 20 °C, temperature affects the quality of groundwater. A difference in temperature of +1 K is linked to a 4% decline in oxygen saturation and a pH drop of 0.02 due to the accumulation of carbon dioxide. Further, warmer groundwater shows signs of enhanced mineral weathering and higher concentrations of drinking water-relevant elements such as manganese. The observed trends in groundwater quality are consistent with a temperature-associated intensification of microbial metabolic rates and enhanced organic matter mineralization at warmer temperatures either within the aquifers or in the overlying soils. A times series analysis reveals that soil and groundwater temperatures in the studied area have been increasing at a rate of 0.1–0.4 K per decade -comparable to recent global warming- driving subtle, but distinct changes in groundwater pH and oxygen concentrations. The results confirm, that certain but central aspects of groundwater quality (pH, O 2 , p CO 2 , Mn, DOC) change due to warming, which may increase the costs for purification when drinking water is produced from groundwater resources and may turn some aquifers uninhabitable for groundwater biota. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00221694
Volume :
572
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Hydrology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
139236742
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhydrol.2019.02.059