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Relation of Pathways and Transit Times of Recharge Water to Nitrate Concentrations Using Stable Isotopes.
Author(s) -
Landon Matthew K.,
Delin Geoffrey N.,
Komor Stephen C.,
Regan Charles P.
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
groundwater
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.84
H-Index - 94
eISSN - 1745-6584
pISSN - 0017-467X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1745-6584.2000.tb00224.x
Subject(s) - groundwater recharge , water table , infiltration (hvac) , vadose zone , hydrology (agriculture) , water content , groundwater , nitrate , aquifer , soil water , depression focused recharge , geology , environmental science , soil science , chemistry , geotechnical engineering , materials science , organic chemistry , composite material
Abstract Oxygen and hydrogen stable isotope values of precipitation, irrigation water, soil water, and ground water were used with soil‐moisture contents and water levels to estimate transit times and pathways of recharge water in the unsaturated zone of a sand and gravel aquifer. Nitrate‐nitrogen (nitrate) concentrations in ground water were also measured to assess their relation to seasonal recharge. Stable isotope values indicated that recharge water usually had a transit time through the unsaturated zone of several weeks to months. However, wetting fronts usually moved through the unsaturated zone in hours to weeks. The much slower transit of isotopic signals than that of wetting fronts indicates that recharge was predominantly composed of older soil water that was displaced downward by more recent infiltrating water. Comparison of observed and simulated isotopic values from pure‐piston flow and mixing‐cell water and isotope mass balance models indicates that soil water isotopic values were usually highly mixed. Thus, movement of recharge water did not occur following a pure piston‐flow displacement model but rather follows a hydrid model involving displacement of mixed older soil water with new infiltration water. An exception to this model occurred in a topographic depression, where movement of water along prelerential flowpaths to the water table occurred within hours to days following spring thaw as result of depression‐focused infiltration of snow melt. In an adjacent upland area, recharge of snow melt occurred one to two months later. Increases in nitrate concentrations at the water table during April‐May 1993 and 1994 in a topographic low‐land within a cora field were related to recharge of water that had infiltrated the previous summer and was displaced from the unsaturated zone by spring infiltration. Increases in nitrate concentrations also occurred during July‐August 1994 in response to recharge of water that infiltrated during May‐August 1994. These results indicate that the largest ground water nitrate concentrations were associated with recharge of water that infiltrated into the soil during May‐August, when most nitrogen fertilizer was applied.