Groundwater origin, flow regime and geochemical evolution in arid endorheic watersheds: a case study from the Qaidam Basin, northwestern China
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Published:2018-08-21
Issue:8
Volume:22
Page:4381-4400
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ISSN:1607-7938
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Container-title:Hydrology and Earth System Sciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci.
Author:
Xiao YongORCID, Shao Jingli, Frape Shaun K., Cui Yali, Dang Xueya, Wang Shengbin, Ji Yonghong
Abstract
Abstract. Groundwater origin, flow and geochemical evolution in the Golmud
River watershed of the Qaidam Basin was assessed using hydrogeochemical,
isotopic and numerical approaches. The stable isotopic results show
groundwater in the basin originates from precipitation and meltwater in the
mountainous areas of the Tibetan Plateau. Modern water was found in the
alluvial fan and shallow aquifers of the loess plain. Deep confined
groundwater was recharged by paleowater during the late Pleistocene and
Holocene under a cold climate. Groundwater in the low-lying depression of the
central basin is composed of paleobrines migrated from the western part of
the basin due to tectonic uplift in the geological past. Groundwater
chemistry is controlled by mineral dissolution (halite, gypsum, anhydrite, mirabilite), silicate weathering, cation exchange, evaporation and mineral precipitation
(halite, gypsum, anhydrite, aragonite, calcite, dolomite) and
varies from fresh to brine with the water types evolving from
HCO3 ⋅ Cl-Ca ⋅ Mg ⋅ Na to Cl-Na, Cl-K-Na
and Cl-Mg type along the flow path. Groundwater flow patterns are closely
related to stratigraphic control and lithological distribution. Three
hierarchical groundwater flow systems, namely local, intermediate and
regional, were identified using numerical modeling. The quantity of water
discharge from these three systems accounts for approximately 83 %, 14 %
and 3 %, respectively, of the total groundwater quantity of the watershed.
This study can enhance the understanding of groundwater origin, circulation
and evolution in the Qaidam Basin as well as other arid endorheic watersheds
in northwestern China and elsewhere worldwide.
Funder
China Geological Survey
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Engineering,General Environmental Science
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