Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6438321 Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 2014 69 Pages PDF
Abstract
In the bedrock fractures, the groundwater is circumneutral to slightly basic and displays YREE concentrations that are at least one order of magnitude lower than the regolith groundwater, and commonly below detection limit in the deep brackish and saline groundwater, with some exceptions such as La and Y. At intermediate depth (>50 m), where groundwater of meteoric origin percolates, the LaNASC/YNASC values moderately to substantially decrease (Laxemar: 0.24-2.65; Forsmark: 0.02-0.06) and Y and Ce anomalies are negligible as compared to the regolith groundwater. Aqueous speciation modeling predicts substantial binding of dissolved Y and La, respectively, to HSs. This, in turn, suggests that the features of the YREE pool in the meteoric fracture groundwater are dominantly controlled by the capacity of fracture minerals to sorb HS ligands inherited from the overlying terrestrial regolith. In the deep bedrock fractures (>100/200 m), the YREE features vary substantially with the groundwater paleo-origin. In Laxemar, where groundwater with pronounced glacial origin percolates, the YREE concentrations decrease with increasing mixing fraction of glacial melt water. There, the dissolved YREEs are mostly bound to HSs, and inherited their fractionation features (LaNASC/YNASC: 0.15-2.1) from water-rock interaction in the intermediate bedrock fractures. In Forsmark, the YREE and heavy REE enrichment (LaNASC/YNASC: 0.007-0.23) are more systematic in the groundwater with pronounced marine origin, due to water-mineral interactions in the sea sediment and in the fractures while infiltrating and percolating. YREE features significantly change in the deep saline groundwater with a long residence time, which displays LaNASC/YNASC similar to those of the local bedrock. The findings of this study are relevant in terms of safety assessment for nuclear waste disposal in crystalline rock carrying groundwater influenced by various paleo-climatic recharges.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geochemistry and Petrology
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