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Transport of Radium and Nutrients Through Eastern South African Beaches
Author(s) -
Moore Willard S.,
Humphries Marc S.,
BenitezNelson Claudia R.,
Pillay Letitia,
Higgs Caldin
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: oceans
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-9291
pISSN - 2169-9275
DOI - 10.1029/2018jc014772
Subject(s) - submarine groundwater discharge , radium , biogeochemistry , nutrient , oceanography , groundwater , salinity , seawater , estuary , environmental science , ecosystem , geology , hydrology (agriculture) , ecology , chemistry , aquifer , biology , geotechnical engineering , radiochemistry
Submarine groundwater discharge (SGD) plays a critical role in coastal and ocean biogeochemistry. Elucidating spatially and temporally heterogeneous SGD fluxes is difficult. Here we use radium isotopes to explore the external sources and mixing regime along the eastern coast of South Africa. We demonstrate that the long‐lived radium isotope compositions are controlled by low inputs of low‐ and high‐salinity terrestrial groundwater. While activities of 228 Ra and 226 Ra in beach porewaters are similar to coastal waters, 224 Ra is enriched by inputs of 228 Th from coastal seawater. Porewater ages, based on the production of 224 Ra from 228 Th, range from 0.3 to 2.3 days, indicating rapid flushing of the beach system. Unlike radium, however, nutrients follow a more complex pathway. We hypothesize that high total dissolved nitrogen (TDN) and phosphorus concentrations in beach porewaters (TDN ranges from 1 to >700 μM) and the coastal ocean (TDN ranges from 1 to >40 μM) are derived from a source not enriched in radium. We speculate that this source is terrestrial water flowing below the dune barrier at depths exceeding our beach sampling depths. This water likely flows upward through breaches in the confining layer into the beach or enters the ocean directly through paleochannels. The presence of high nutrient concentrations in the coastal ocean unaccompanied by high 228 Ra activities leads to the hypothesis of this additional nutrient source. These combined inputs may be of considerable importance to the coastal ecology of southeastern Africa, an oligotrophic ecosystem dominated by the nutrient‐poor Agulhas Current.

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