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Lithological controls on biological activity and groundwater chemistry in Quaternary sediments
26
Citations
41
References
2009
Year
EngineeringGroundwater ChemistryLithological ControlsMechanical RestrictionEarth ScienceSediments SulfateEnvironmental GeochemistrySolute ChemistryMicrobial EcologySoil MicrobiologyEnvironmental MicrobiologyQuaternary SedimentsBiogeochemistrySediment QualitySediment-water InteractionGroundwater HydrogeochemistrySedimentologySediment TransportEnvironmental Engineering
Abstract Depth profiles of solute chemistry and sulfate isotopic compositions are presented for groundwater and pore water in a sequence of Quaternary glacial outwash sediments. Sand units show evidence for hydraulic connection to the surface and thus modern sources of solutes. Finer‐grained sediments show a general pattern of increasing solute concentrations with depth, with sulfate derived from ancient rainwater and pyrite oxidation in the soil/drift. In these sediments sulfate has undergone bacterial sulfate reduction (BSR) to produce biogenic sulfide. In clay sediments, with d 10 ≤ 1·6 µm, high concentrations of sulfate and acetate now co‐exist, implying that BSR is inhibited. The correlation with smaller sediment grain size indicates that this is due to pore size exclusion of the sulfate reducing bacteria. Mechanical restriction of microbial function thus provides a fundamental limitation on microbial respiration in buried clay‐rich sediments, which acts as a control on the chemical evolution of their pore waters. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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