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Concentration‐Discharge Relationships of Dissolved Rhenium in Alpine Catchments Reveal Its Use as a Tracer of Oxidative Weathering
Author(s) -
Hilton Robert G.,
Turowski Jens M.,
Winnick Matthew,
Dellinger Mathieu,
Schleppi Patrick,
Williams Kenneth H.,
Lawrence Corey R.,
Maher Katharine,
West Martin,
Hayton Amanda
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
water resources research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.863
H-Index - 217
eISSN - 1944-7973
pISSN - 0043-1397
DOI - 10.1029/2021wr029844
Subject(s) - weathering , geology , sedimentary rock , drainage basin , hydrology (agriculture) , geochemistry , total organic carbon , dissolved organic carbon , tracer , environmental chemistry , environmental science , geomorphology , oceanography , chemistry , physics , cartography , geotechnical engineering , nuclear physics , geography
Oxidative weathering of sedimentary rocks plays an important role in the global carbon cycle. Rhenium (Re) has been proposed as a tracer of rock organic carbon (OC petro ) oxidation. However, the sources of Re and its mobilization by hydrological processes remain poorly constrained. Here, we examine dissolved Re as a function of water discharge, using samples collected from three alpine catchments that drain sedimentary rocks in Switzerland (Erlenbach and Vogelbach) and Colorado, USA (East River). The Swiss catchments reveal a higher dissolved Re flux in the catchment with higher erosion rates, but have similar [Re]/[Na + ] and [Re]/[SO 4 2− ] ratios, which indicate a dominance of Re from OC petro . Despite differences in rock type and hydro‐climatic setting, the three catchments have a positive correlation between river water [Re]/[Na + ] and [Re]/[SO 4 2− ] and water discharge. We propose that this reflects preferential routing of Re from a near‐surface, oxidative weathering zone. The observations support the use of Re as a proxy to trace rock‐organic carbon oxidation, and suggest it may be a hydrological tracer of vadose zone processes. We apply the Re proxy and estimate CO 2 release by OC petro oxidation of 5.7 +6.6 / −2.0 tC km −2  yr −1 for the Erlenbach. The overall weathering intensity was ∼40%, meaning that the corresponding export of unweathered OC petro in river sediments is large, and the findings call for more measurements of OC petro oxidation in mountains and rivers as they cross floodplains.

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