Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W1653662004> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W1653662004 endingPage "19" @default.
- W1653662004 startingPage "12" @default.
- W1653662004 abstract "[1] Nonconservative excesses of dissolved metals in northern San Francisco Bay indicate that there are internal sources of metals within the bay. We quantified groundwater seepage and bioirrigation rates in this area to determine their roles in transporting dissolved metals from benthic sediments to surface waters. We deployed seepage meters and collected sediment, pore water, and bottom water samples at three sites. We determined seepage rates from seepage meters and modeled the transport of water through the sediment using pore water data to constrain rates of diffusion, advection, and bioirrigation. A groundwater flow model incorporating sediment physical properties and local topography constrains more regional seepage estimates. The seepage meters indicate upflow rates from 7 to 56 cm yr−1 in March and April 1999 with some large (≤50 cm yr−1) daily fluctuations that greatly exceed predictions based on sediment physical properties and tidally induced pore pressure variations. During this period, results from modeling pore water chemical data are consistent with a small bioirrigation rate (<1.5 × 10−7 s−1) relative to values determined for southern San Francisco Bay, and an average groundwater upwelling speed of 15 cm yr−1. The speed and direction of flow changed throughout the year, with best fits to the data ranging from 20 cm yr−1 upflow to 34 cm yr−1 downflow and averaging 4 cm yr−1 upflow. Confidence intervals (95%) are about ±10 cm yr−1 for this method, yet the range of acceptable seepage rates for temporally successive periods only overlap in one of four cases, suggesting that temporal variability can be discerned from potential artifacts. Groundwater flow modeling suggests that the seepage rates determined at our sites represent ∼45% of the average seepage rate for the area, applying one consolidation and permeability relationship to all sediments. If we apply these approximations to all of northern San Francisco Bay, benthic fluxes of dissolved metals to the surface waters could account for a relatively large amount (≤60%) of the unknown sources of dissolved cobalt and a relatively small amount (≤4%) of the unknown sources of dissolved silver, cadmium, copper, nickel, and zinc. More focused groundwater discharge or elevated metals concentrations are required to have a larger impact on trace element budgets in this setting." @default.
- W1653662004 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W1653662004 creator A5028211856 @default.
- W1653662004 creator A5039152357 @default.
- W1653662004 creator A5040761934 @default.
- W1653662004 creator A5042957984 @default.
- W1653662004 creator A5047180581 @default.
- W1653662004 creator A5071270288 @default.
- W1653662004 date "2002-07-01" @default.
- W1653662004 modified "2023-10-16" @default.
- W1653662004 title "Groundwater seepage into northern San Francisco Bay: Implications for dissolved metals budgets" @default.
- W1653662004 cites W1232708571 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W1536600197 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W1552159529 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W1965840910 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W1968617265 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W1971179548 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W1973061286 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W1977233589 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W1977382709 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W1978064699 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W1985456014 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W1997295847 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W1998497315 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2000972109 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2003846888 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2007083264 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2014003043 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2016130777 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2017188476 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2023756859 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2024095837 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2031959649 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2033777201 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2036462019 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2043977454 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2044233272 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2044958444 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2053635194 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2054866291 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2055783325 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2055898789 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2059552060 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2063275831 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2063656463 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2068049697 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2070685204 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2073221741 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2074161429 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2074183980 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2075190321 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2079960671 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2082725333 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2082876123 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2089602988 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2106581979 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2108724551 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2121593390 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2125672381 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2126592102 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2133225479 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2150821770 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2164753496 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W2318531186 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W4229489026 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W4231995025 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W4237441677 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W4237935647 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W4241036758 @default.
- W1653662004 cites W86432926 @default.
- W1653662004 doi "https://doi.org/10.1029/2001wr000827" @default.
- W1653662004 hasPublicationYear "2002" @default.
- W1653662004 type Work @default.
- W1653662004 sameAs 1653662004 @default.
- W1653662004 citedByCount "19" @default.
- W1653662004 countsByYear W16536620042012 @default.
- W1653662004 countsByYear W16536620042013 @default.
- W1653662004 countsByYear W16536620042014 @default.
- W1653662004 countsByYear W16536620042018 @default.
- W1653662004 countsByYear W16536620042022 @default.
- W1653662004 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W1653662004 hasAuthorship W1653662004A5028211856 @default.
- W1653662004 hasAuthorship W1653662004A5039152357 @default.
- W1653662004 hasAuthorship W1653662004A5040761934 @default.
- W1653662004 hasAuthorship W1653662004A5042957984 @default.
- W1653662004 hasAuthorship W1653662004A5047180581 @default.
- W1653662004 hasAuthorship W1653662004A5071270288 @default.
- W1653662004 hasBestOaLocation W16536620041 @default.
- W1653662004 hasConcept C111368507 @default.
- W1653662004 hasConcept C115880899 @default.
- W1653662004 hasConcept C127313418 @default.
- W1653662004 hasConcept C187320778 @default.
- W1653662004 hasConcept C39432304 @default.
- W1653662004 hasConcept C524765639 @default.
- W1653662004 hasConcept C76177295 @default.
- W1653662004 hasConcept C76886044 @default.
- W1653662004 hasConceptScore W1653662004C111368507 @default.
- W1653662004 hasConceptScore W1653662004C115880899 @default.