Concentration–discharge relationships reflect chemostatic characteristics of US catchments
Planetary Science Institute · Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research · +5 more institutions
Abstract
Abstract Concentration–discharge relationships have been widely used as clues to the hydrochemical processes that control runoff chemistry. Here we examine concentration–discharge relationships for solutes produced primarily by mineral weathering in 59 geochemically diverse US catchments. We show that these catchments exhibit nearly chemostatic behaviour; their stream concentrations of weathering products such as Ca, Mg, Na, and Si typically vary by factors of only 3 to 20 while discharge varies by several orders of magnitude. Similar patterns are observed at the inter‐annual time scale. This behaviour implies that solute concentrations in stream water are not determined by simple dilution of a fixed solute…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 13.90
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 57
Authors
3- SESarah E. GodseyCorresponding
Planetary Science Institute
- JWJames W. Kirchner
Planetary Science Institute, Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research, ETH Zurich, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, University of California, Berkeley
- DWDavid W. Clow
United States Geological Survey, Denver Federal Center
Topics & keywords
- Alkalinity
- Weathering
- Hydrology (agriculture)
- Dilution
- Environmental science
- Surface runoff
- Flux (metallurgy)
- STREAMS
- Life below water