Abstract
In weathered bedrock aquifers, groundwater is stored in pores and fractures that open as rocks are exhumed and minerals interact with meteoric fluids. Little is known about this storage because geochemical and geophysical observations are limited to pits, boreholes, or outcrops or to inferences based on indirect measurements between these sites. We trained a rock physics model to borehole observations in a well-constrained ridge and valley landscape and then interpreted spatial variations in seismic refraction velocities. We discovered that P-wave velocities track where a porosity-generating reaction initiates in shale in three boreholes across the landscape. Specifically, velocities of 2.7 ± 0.2 km/s correspond with growth of porosity from dissolution of chlorite, the most reactive of the abundant minerals in the shale. In addition, sonic velocities are consistent with the presence of gas bubbles beneath the water table under valley and ridge. We attribute this gas largely to CO2 produced by 1) microbial respiration in soils as meteoric waters recharge into the subsurface and 2) the coupled carbonate dissolution and pyrite oxidation at depth in the rock. Bubbles may nucleate below the water table because waters depressurize as they flow from ridge to valley and because pores have dilated as the deep rock has been exhumed by erosion. Many of these observations are likely to also describe the weathering and flow path patterns in other headwater landscapes. Such combined geophysical and geochemical observations will help constrain models predicting flow, storage, and reaction of groundwater in bedrock systems.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 18991-18997 |
| Number of pages | 7 |
| Journal | Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America |
| Volume | 117 |
| Issue number | 32 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Aug 11 2020 |
| Externally published | Yes |
Funding
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS. Funding is acknowledged from Department of Energy Basic Energy Sciences DE-FG02-05ER15675 and NSF Critical Zone Observatory Grants EAR 12-39285 and 13-31726 (to S.L.B.). Work at Shale Hills is facilitated by the Penn State College of Agricultural Sciences and Department of Ecosystem Science and Management as part of Penn State’s Stone Valley Forest. Access to the small-angle neutron scattering instruments was provided by the Center for High Resolution Neutron Scattering, a partnership between the National Institute of Standards and Technology and the NSF under Agreement DMR-1508249. W. Wang and B. Forsythe are acknowledged for helpful discussions and field work. C. Cole, J. Grant, A. Herman, P. Dechdacho, and R. Alshimmari are acknowledged for help with picking. We thank T. Sowers at Laboratory for Isotopes and Metals in the Environment at Penn State for carbon isotope measurements, and we thank the IRIS Portable Array Seismic Studies of the Continental Lithosphere Instrument Center for providing seismic equipment and for assisting with data management.
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