Chemical weathering and lithologic controls of water chemistry in a high-elevation river system: Clark's Fork of the Yellowstone River, Wyoming and Montana

Citation
Tw. Horton et al., Chemical weathering and lithologic controls of water chemistry in a high-elevation river system: Clark's Fork of the Yellowstone River, Wyoming and Montana, WATER RES R, 35(5), 1999, pp. 1643-1655
Citations number
48
Categorie Soggetti
Environment/Ecology,"Civil Engineering
Journal title
WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH
ISSN journal
00431397 → ACNP
Volume
35
Issue
5
Year of publication
1999
Pages
1643 - 1655
Database
ISI
SICI code
0043-1397(199905)35:5<1643:CWALCO>2.0.ZU;2-3
Abstract
Seasonal analyses of surface water geochemistry were conducted in the Clark 's Fork of the Yellowstone watershed to determine whole-rock weathering rat es. The Clark's Fork of the Yellowstone is a high-elevation catchment with distinct bedrock lithologies. Using dissolved solute concentrations and str eam flow data, we calculated cation denudation rates of 119 g m(-2) yr(-1) (65,900 eq ha(-1) yr(-1)) for carbonate-rich sedimentary rocks, 16.6 g m(-2 ) (8200 eq ha(-1) yr(-1)) for andesitic volcanics, and 9.8 g m(-2) yr(-1) ( 5300 eq ha(-1) yr(-1)) for granitic gneisses. Ca/Na ratios indicate that ch emical weathering of disseminated calcite in granitic rocks contributes to the total solute load in these subcatchments. Removal of this calcite compo nent decreased our calculated granitic weathering rate to 3.4 g m(-2) yr(-1 ) (2100 eq ha(-1) yr(-1)).