The Salinity of the Great Salt Lake and Its Deep Brine Layer

Author:

Merck Madeline F.1,Tarboton David G.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Utah Water Research Laboratory, Utah State University, Logan, UT 84322, USA

Abstract

The Great Salt Lake is a highly saline terminal lake with considerable fluctuations in water surface elevation and salinity. The lake is divided into two arms by a railroad causeway. River inflows enter the larger south arm, while the north arm only receives minimal surface runoff. Evaporation from both arms and limited exchange of water and salt through causeway openings result in complex water and salinity processes in the lake. The north arm is typically homogeneous and close to saturation. The south arm is typically stratified with periodic occurrences of a deep brine layer. This paper analyzes the lake’s long-term historical salinity and water surface elevation data record. Its purpose is to better document the movement of salt and changes to salinity in time and space within the lake and the occurrence and extent of its deep brine layer. This work is important because of the lake’s salinity-dependent ecosystem and industries as well as the role played by the deep brine layer in the concentration of salt and contaminants. We documented that the deep brine layer in the south arm is intermittent, occurring only when causeway exchange supports flow from the north to the south arms. We found that the overall mass of salt in the lake is declining and quantified this in terms of mineral extraction records and historical density measurements.

Funder

Utah Water Research Laboratory

Sant Foundation Endowed Professorship

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Water Science and Technology,Aquatic Science,Geography, Planning and Development,Biochemistry

Reference38 articles.

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4. Utah Division of Forestry, Fire and State Lands (UDFFSL) (2023, January 06). Final Great Salt Lake Comprehensive Management Plan and Record of Decision, Available online: https://geodata.geology.utah.gov/pages/view.php?ref=8267.

5. Loving, B.L., Waddell, K.M., and Miller, C.W. (2022, August 12). Water and Salt Balance of Great Salt Lake, Utah, and Simulation of Water and Salt Movement through the Causeway, 1987–98, Available online: https://pubs.usgs.gov/wri/2000/4221/report.pdf.

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