Affiliation:
1. Department of Earth Science & Environmental Change University of Illinois at Urbana‐Champaign Urbana IL USA
2. Now at Physical and Life Sciences Directorate Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Livermore CA USA
3. Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris Sorbonne Paris Cité CNRS Université Paris Diderot Paris France
4. Bundesamt für Strahlenschutz Berlin Germany
Abstract
AbstractLithium isotope ratios (δ7Li) of rivers are increasingly serving as a diagnostic of the balance between chemical and physical weathering contributions to overall landscape denudation rates. Here, we show that intermediate weathering intensities and highly enriched stream δ7Li values typically associated with lowland floodplains can also describe small upland watersheds subject to cool, wet climates. This behavior is revealed by stream δ7Li between +22.4 and +23.5‰ within a Critical Zone observatory located in the Cévennes region of southern France, where dilute stream solute concentrations and significant atmospheric deposition otherwise mask evidence of incongruence. The water‐rock reaction pathways underlying this behavior are quantified through a multicomponent, isotope‐enabled reactive transport model. Using geochemical characterization of soil profiles, bedrock, and long‐term stream samples as constraints, we evolve the simulation from an initially unweathered granite to a steady state weathering profile which reflects the balance between (a) fluid infiltration and drainage and (b) bedrock uplift and soil erosion. Enriched stream δ7Li occurs because Li is strongly incorporated into actively precipitating secondary clay phases beyond what prior laboratory experiments have suggested. Chemical weathering incongruence is maintained despite relatively slow reaction rates and moderate clay accumulation due to a combination of two factors. First, reactive primary mineral phases persist across the weathering profile and effectively “shield” the secondary clays from resolubilization due to their greater solubility. Second, the clays accumulating in the near‐surface profile are relatively mature weathering byproducts. These factors promote characteristically low total dissolved solute export from the catchment despite significant input of exogenous dust.
Funder
National Science Foundation
Seventh Framework Programme
Publisher
American Geophysical Union (AGU)
Cited by
1 articles.
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