EGU2020-10148
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-10148
EGU General Assembly 2020
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Tritium-Helium Dating of Groundwater in a Fractured and Karstified Carbonate Rock Aquifer

Karsten Osenbrück1, Freya Fünfgeld1, Jürgen Sültenfuss2, Nia Blackwell1, and Peter Grathwohl1
Karsten Osenbrück et al.
  • 1Center for Applied Geoscience, University of Tuebingen, Tuebingen, Germany (karsten.osenbrueck@uni-tuebingen.de)
  • 2Institute of Environmental Physics, University of Bremen, Bremen, Germany (suelten@uni-bremen.de)

Fractured and karstified aquifers are often vulnerable to pollution by nitrate or other anthropogenic compounds. Therefore, a better understanding of the flow and transport processes in these aquifers is imperative for effective drinking water management. In this study, we used the analysis of tritium and tritiogenic helium-3 concentrations to estimate the residence and exposure time of nitrate transported in a fractured groundwater system of the Upper Muschelkalk in southwest Germany.

The recharge area is characterised by elevated nitrate concentrations of up to 60 mg/L which are in accordance with dominating agricultural landuse in the catchment. Further along the groundwater flow direction a significant decrease in dissolved oxygen as well as nitrate concentrations to values close to the detection limit is observed.

Tritium/3He ages were found to be in the range of zero to forty years. However, in the fractured aquifer the age tracers were most probably affected by mixing and exchange processes that might change the concentration as well as the ratio of tritium and helium-3 in addition to radioactive decay. Therefore, we investigated the impact of different transport processes such as mixing of water parcels at fracture joints or exchange between mobile water on fractures and the pore matrix using forward convolution approaches for both isotopes separately.

In combination with hydrochemical, multi-isotopic, petrographical, and molecular biological data, the groundwater residence time data was intended to gain crucial insight into the processes and limiting factors of autotrophic denitrification found within the Muschelkalk aquifer.

How to cite: Osenbrück, K., Fünfgeld, F., Sültenfuss, J., Blackwell, N., and Grathwohl, P.: Tritium-Helium Dating of Groundwater in a Fractured and Karstified Carbonate Rock Aquifer, EGU General Assembly 2020, Online, 4–8 May 2020, EGU2020-10148, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-10148, 2020.