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Oxygen and hydrogen isotopic ratios and chemistry in semiarid land river water, Southwest Victoria, Australia

journal contribution
posted on 2002-01-01, 00:00 authored by H II, John SherwoodJohn Sherwood, Francesco Stagnitti, N Turoczy, T Hirata, M Nishikawa
Salt in a salt lake accumulated as a result of perfect evaporation of inflow water during the dry season. Water in a salt lake had a high salinity and its isotope indicated a little evaporation in the wet season because precipitation replenished the salt lake and there was no residual water during evaporation process in salt lake. In a marsh, both perfect and partial disappearance of water by repeated evaporation and water supply from upstream contributed to high salinity and high isotopic ratios because residual water had high isotopic ratios and dried areas accumulated salt. On the other hand, salinity and isotopic ratios depended on ratio of evaporation and water supply during evaporation excluding perfect disappearance of water.

History

Journal

Journal of the Japan Society of Civil Engineers

Volume

791

Pagination

1 - 9

Publisher

Doboku Gakkai

Location

Tokyo, Japan

ISSN

0021-468X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

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