Se. Grasby et al., APPLICATION OF THE STABLE-ISOTOPE COMPOSITION OF SO4 TO TRACING ANOMALOUS TDS IN NOSE CREEK, SOUTHERN ALBERTA, CANADA, Applied geochemistry, 12(5), 1997, pp. 567-575
Nose Creek, a tributary of the Bow River, has a TDS load that is signi
ficantly higher than the Bow River or its other tributaries. Chemical
and stable isotope analyses were used to elucidate the sources of TDS
in Nose Creek. Oxygen and H isotopes indicate that water is added to N
ose Creek by leaky municipal pipes, via groundwater infiltration, as t
he creek flows through the cities of Airdrie and Calgary. Upstream of
Airdrie, the high delta(34)S Of dissolved SO4 (+175 parts per thousand
), is consistent with derivation from the local sour gas industry. The
SO4 concentration of Nose Creek doubles as the creek flows through ag
ricultural land between Airdrie and Calgary, while the delta(34)S comp
osition remains a consistent 5 parts per thousand. This is indicative
of S derived from local soils. Within Calgary, SO4 is derived from oxi
dation of reduced forms of S in the till, related to the influx of mun
icipal groundwater. (C) 1997 Elsevier Science Ltd.