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Fresh and saline submarine groundwater discharge in a large coastal inlet affected by seasonal upwelling
Author(s) -
Ibánhez J. Severino P.,
ÁlvarezSalgado Xosé Antón,
NietoCid Mar,
Rocha Carlos
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
limnology and oceanography
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.7
H-Index - 197
eISSN - 1939-5590
pISSN - 0024-3590
DOI - 10.1002/lno.11733
Subject(s) - submarine groundwater discharge , hydrology (agriculture) , upwelling , oceanography , tributary , geology , bay , groundwater , seawater , groundwater discharge , environmental science , discharge , mangrove , groundwater flow , aquifer , drainage basin , fishery , geotechnical engineering , cartography , geography , biology
Submarine groundwater discharge is recognized as a major source of chemicals to the global ocean, exerting large control over coastal water composition. Radon and 226 Ra are used to evaluate, for the first time, the occurrence and magnitude of submarine groundwater discharge in the Ría de Vigo, a large, highly productive embayment affected by seasonal, wind‐driven upwelling. The system is naturally enriched in 222 Rn due to the regional granitic basement geology: high 222 Rn activities (up to 10 6 Bq m −3 ) are detected in wells and boreholes in the drainage basin of the embayment. High 222 Rn activities (>400 Bq m −3 ) are also measured in certain areas of the embayment. Comparatively lower 226 Ra activities (<4 10 3 Bq m −3 ) were measured in the freshwater sources to the bay. Mass balances obtained with a box model are used to perform a volumetric estimate of fresh and saline submarine groundwater discharge in the Ría de Vigo under contrasting circulation patterns. Fresh groundwater is shown to be a relevant hydrological component of the Ria de Vigo water balance, equivalent to 9% ± 4% and 23% ± 9% of the volume discharged by tributary rivers during winter and summer, respectively. On the other hand, recirculation of seawater through permeable sediments is capable of filtering the entire upper volume of the Ria de Vigo through its seafloor in <100 days and might thus be a previously overlooked major source of regenerated solutes to the system.