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Hydrochemical variations and contaminant load in the Río Tinto (Spain) during flood events

Cánovas, C.R., Hubbard, Christopher, Olías, M., Nieto, J.M., Black, S. and Coleman, M.L. 2008. Hydrochemical variations and contaminant load in the Río Tinto (Spain) during flood events. Journal of Hydrology 350 (1-2) , pp. 25-40. 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2007.11.022

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Abstract

Summary The aim of this work is to study the hydrochemical variations during flood events in the Rı´o Tinto, SW Spain. Three separate rainfall/flood events were monitored in October 2004 following the dry season. In general, concentrations markedly increased following the first event (Fe from 99 to 1130 mg/L; Qmax = 0.78 m3/s) while dissolved loads peaked in the second event (Fe = 7.5 kg/s, Cu = 0.83 kg/s, Zn = 0.82 kg/s; Qmax = 77 m3/s) and discharge in the third event (Qmax = 127 m3/s). This pattern reflects a progressive depletion of metals and sulphate stored in the dry summer as soluble evaporitic salt minerals and concentrated pore fluids, with dilution by freshwater becoming increasingly dominant as the month progressed. Variations in relative concentrations were attributed to oxyhydroxysulphate Fe precipitation, to relative changes in the sources of acid mine drainage (e.g. salt minerals, mine tunnels, spoil heaps etc.) and to differences in the rainfall distributions along the catchment. The contaminant load carried by the river during October 2004 was enormous, totalling some 770 t of Fe, 420 t of Al, 100 t of Cu, 100 t of Zn and 71 t of Mn. This represents the largest recorded example of this flush-out process in an acid mine drainage setting. Approximately 1000 times more water and 140– 8200 times more dissolved elements were carried by the river during October 2004 than during the dry, low-flow conditions of September 2004, highlighting the key role of flood events in the annual pollutant transport budget of semi-arid and arid systems and the need to monitor these events in detail in order to accurately quantify pollutant transport.

Item Type: Article
Date Type: Publication
Status: Published
Schools: Biosciences
Publisher: Elsevier
ISSN: 0022-1694
Date of First Compliant Deposit: 5 September 2017
Date of Acceptance: 19 November 2007
Last Modified: 08 Sep 2017 14:35
URI: https://orca.cardiff.ac.uk/id/eprint/104362

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