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An integrated approach to quantify groundwater transport of phosphorus to Narrow Lake, Alberta

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TLDR
In this paper, an integrated approach was used to quantify groundwater phosphorus flux to Narrow Lake, a smallglacial-terrain lake in central Alberta, and the rate of groundwater P loading to the lake computed from average seepage flux and average pore-water [P] was 39 mg m-2 yr-I.
Abstract
An integrated approach was used to quantify groundwater phosphorus flux to Narrow Lake, a smallglacial-terrain lake in central Alberta. Data from a drilling program, major ion concentrations, environmental isotopes, and computer simulations indicated that the lake gains water through the nearshore region from a small, shallow groundwater flow system; at deep offshore regions, water moves from the lake to the groundwater flow system. Seepage flux was quantified by water budget, Darcy’s equation with data from wells near the lake, Darcy’s equation with data from minipiezometers in the lake, and seepage meters. Whole-lake seepage flux determined from minipiezometer data (30 mm yr-I) was only lO-25% of the other estimates (mean, 221 mm yr-I; range, 133-332 mm yr- l from seepage meter and water budget data, respectively). Groundwater contributed - 30% of the annual water load to the lake. The P concentration, [PI, in pore water from lake sediments (mean, 175 mg m-‘) was 8 times higher than groundwater from wells near the lake (mean, 2 1 mg m-3). Thus, if well water was used to estimate the [P] of the seepage water, the rate of groundwater P loading to the lake would be underestimated. The rate of groundwater P loading to the lake computed from average seepage flux and average pore-water [P] was 39 mg m-2 yr-I, and groundwater may be the largest single source of P to epilimnetic water in the lake.

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Citations
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Groundwater as a geologic agent: An overview of the causes, processes, and manifestations

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that groundwater is a general geologic agent and its properties, geometries, and controlling factors became recognized and understood through the 1960s and 1970s.
Journal ArticleDOI

Continuous Measurements of Ground‐Water Seepage Using an Automatic Seepage Meter

TL;DR: In this article, an automatic seepage meter using a heat pulse method was developed to obtain a continuous measurement of ground-water SEEPage rates, which is useful for surface/ground-water studies, because a continuous SEEPAGE rate can be obtained without errors caused by the resistance of a collection bag to water flow.
Journal ArticleDOI

Groundwater ‐ the disregarded component in lake water and nutrient budgets. Part 1: effects of groundwater on hydrology

TL;DR: A brief history of the evolution of the study of groundwater exchange with lakes, followed by a listing of the most commonly used methods for quantifying this exchange can be found in this article.
Journal ArticleDOI

Recent advances in understanding the interaction of groundwater and surface water

TL;DR: The most common image of the interaction of ground water and surface water is that of streams with a contiguous alluvial aquifer as mentioned in this paper, and this type of system has been the focus of study for more than 100 years, from the work of Boussinesq (1877) to the present, and stream-aquifer interaction continues to be the most common topic of papers discussing the interaction.
Journal ArticleDOI

Phosphorus in groundwater discharge – A potential source for lake eutrophication

TL;DR: In this article, the authors quantified P loads from groundwater to Lake Arendsee using near-shore measurements of P concentrations at a high spatial resolution and volume fluxes of lacustrine groundwater discharge (LGD) derived from a previous study.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A modified single solution method for the determination of phosphate in natural waters

J. Murphy, +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, a single solution reagent was described for the determination of phosphorus in sea water, which consists of an acidified solution of ammonium molybdate containing ascorbic acid and a small amount of antimony.
Journal ArticleDOI

Variation of O18 content of waters from natural sources

TL;DR: A number of marine water and fresh water samples were examined for the relative O18O16 ratio, and the variation of this ratio was determined to a precision of ± 1% as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

A generalized graphical method for evaluating formation constants and summarizing well-field history

TL;DR: The capacities of a water-bearing formation to transmit water under a hydraulic gradient and to yield water from storage when the water table or artesian pressure declines, are generally expressed, respectively, in terms of a coefficient of transmissibility and a coefficients of storage.
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