TY - JOUR
T1 - Vertical leaching of paleo-saltwater in a coastal aquifer–aquitard system of the Pearl River Delta
AU - Yu, Shengchao
AU - Jiao, Jiu Jimmy
AU - Luo, Xin
AU - Li, Hailong
AU - Wang, Xuejing
AU - Wang, Qianqian
AU - Yao, Meng
AU - Guo, Yifan
AU - Deng, Zhiyun
AU - Zuo, Jinchao
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2023/11
Y1 - 2023/11
N2 - Marine transgressive and regressive processes have promoted the formation of deltas and estuaries from the postglacial period, and the coastal aquifer-aquitard system can be identified based on the complicated sedimentary environments in the river delta. The groundwater system is usually composed of freshwater and paleo saltwater, and the vertical leaching of paleo saltwater from aquitard to fresh aquifer occurs due to density difference and gravity effect. In this study, radium quartet and radon were used as the tracers for groundwater due to their different half-lives. We constructed a radium reactive transport model considering the vertical leaching of paleo saltwater in a deltaic aquifer-aquitard system and then applied it in the Pearl River Delta (PRD). The activity ratio of 224Ra to 228Ra was used to characterize whether the groundwater system was controlled by α-recoil or sufficient 232Th under fully weathered condition, and results showed that the deltaic system was well weathered and the vertical leaching of paleo saltwater inhibited the α-recoil input and increased the decay of the sorbed parent nuclide in the aquifer. After incorporating the vertical leaching of saltwater in the model, the value of retardation factor in the shallow aquitard evidently increased, meaning that the leaching of salty porewater into the aquifer greatly affected the adsorption–desorption process of radium isotopes in the aquitard, and the value of retardation factor reduced to the lower limit in the basal aquifer, indicating that the desorption process was determined by the vertical leaching of saltwater here. After considering the effect of vertical leaching, the estimated water transit time in the aquifer was decreased and the groundwater discharge rate was increased, and the converse results were obtained in the aquitard. The proposed radium reactive transport model advances the understanding of the salinization process in coastal aquifers through vertical migration and facilitates the understanding of freshening process of paleo saltwater in the river delta with similar hydrogeological settings.
AB - Marine transgressive and regressive processes have promoted the formation of deltas and estuaries from the postglacial period, and the coastal aquifer-aquitard system can be identified based on the complicated sedimentary environments in the river delta. The groundwater system is usually composed of freshwater and paleo saltwater, and the vertical leaching of paleo saltwater from aquitard to fresh aquifer occurs due to density difference and gravity effect. In this study, radium quartet and radon were used as the tracers for groundwater due to their different half-lives. We constructed a radium reactive transport model considering the vertical leaching of paleo saltwater in a deltaic aquifer-aquitard system and then applied it in the Pearl River Delta (PRD). The activity ratio of 224Ra to 228Ra was used to characterize whether the groundwater system was controlled by α-recoil or sufficient 232Th under fully weathered condition, and results showed that the deltaic system was well weathered and the vertical leaching of paleo saltwater inhibited the α-recoil input and increased the decay of the sorbed parent nuclide in the aquifer. After incorporating the vertical leaching of saltwater in the model, the value of retardation factor in the shallow aquitard evidently increased, meaning that the leaching of salty porewater into the aquifer greatly affected the adsorption–desorption process of radium isotopes in the aquitard, and the value of retardation factor reduced to the lower limit in the basal aquifer, indicating that the desorption process was determined by the vertical leaching of saltwater here. After considering the effect of vertical leaching, the estimated water transit time in the aquifer was decreased and the groundwater discharge rate was increased, and the converse results were obtained in the aquitard. The proposed radium reactive transport model advances the understanding of the salinization process in coastal aquifers through vertical migration and facilitates the understanding of freshening process of paleo saltwater in the river delta with similar hydrogeological settings.
KW - Aquifer-Aquitard System
KW - Leaching Effect
KW - Paleo Saltwater
KW - Radium Reactive Transport
KW - The Pearl River Delta
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85173630844
U2 - 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2023.130168
DO - 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2023.130168
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85173630844
SN - 0022-1694
VL - 626
JO - Journal of Hydrology
JF - Journal of Hydrology
M1 - 130168
ER -