Title of article :
Labile aluminium chemistry downstream a limestone treated lake and
an acid tributary: Effects of warm winters and extreme rainstorms
Author/Authors :
Dag O. Andersen *، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Abstract :
The outlet from the limestone treated Lake Terjevann consisted mainly of well-mixed lake water (mean pH 6.1) during the icefree
seasons including the unusually warm winters of 1992 and 1993. However, during the ice-covered period acidic water (mean
pH 4.8, mean inorganic aluminium (Ali) about 160 Ag/l) from the catchment draining under the lake ice dominated. A downstream
tributary was generally acid and rich in aluminium (mean pH 4.6, Ali about 230 Ag/l). After an extreme rainstorm loaded with seasalts
cation exchange in the soil resulted in more than a doubling of the Ali concentration (reaching about 500 Ag/l). It took 3–4
months until the Ali concentration returned to pre-event levels. During the ice-covered period, the acidic outlet and tributary waters
resulted in acidic conditions below the confluence (pHb4.8, Ali about 150 Ag/l) while during the ice-free periods the more neutral
outlet water resulted in higher pH and lower Ali concentrations (pHN5.2, Ali about 95 Ag/l). However, during the latter climatic
conditions the water was most probably more harmful to fish due to hydrolysing and polymerizing aluminium. After the sea-salt
event, the increased Ali concentration in the tributary made the zone below the confluence potentially more toxic (pH~5, Ali~250
Ag/l). Expected global warming resulting in winter mean temperatures above 0 8C may eliminate the seasonal acidification of the
outlet from limestone-treated lakes creating permanent toxic mixing zones in the confluence below acidic aluminium-rich
tributaries. Besides, more frequent rainstorms as a consequence of global warming may increase the frequency of sea-salt events
and the Ali concentrations in the mixing zones.
Keywords :
acidification , limestone treatment , Aluminium , global warming , Rainstorms , Warm winters
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment