Abstract

Abstract. Tritium measurements of streamwater draining the Toenepi catchment, a small dairy farming area in Waikato, New Zealand, have shown that the mean transit time of the water varies with the flow rate of the stream. Mean transit times through the catchment are 2–5 years during high baseflow conditions in winter, increasing to 30–40 years as baseflow decreases in summer, and then dramatically older water during drought conditions with mean transit time of more than 100 years. Older water is gained in the lower reaches of the stream, compared to younger water in the headwater catchment. The groundwater store supplying baseflow was estimated from the mean transit time and average baseflow to be 15.4 × 106 m3 of water, about 1 m water equivalent over the catchment and 2.3 times total annual streamflow. Nitrate is relatively high at higher flow rates in winter, but is low at times of low flow with old water. This reflects both lower nitrate loading in the catchment several decades ago as compared to current intensive dairy farming, and denitrification processes occurring in the older groundwater. Silica, leached from the aquifer material and accumulating in the water in proportion to contact time, is high at times of low streamflow with old water. There was a good correlation between silica concentration and streamwater age, which potentially allows silica concentrations to be used as a proxy for age when calibrated by tritium measurements. This study shows that tritium dating of stream water is possible with single tritium measurements now that bomb-test tritium has effectively disappeared from hydrological systems in New Zealand, without the need for time-series data.

Highlights

  • The source of the baseflow component in streams is usually groundwater

  • We show with data from the small Toenepi catchment in New Zealand how the age of the streamwater illumines these dynamics

  • The fraction of transit time through the piston flow part of the total flow volume of the flow (TTPF = 7 years) and 84 m at summer drought conditions (TTPF = 30 years) at the flow velocity of the unsaturated exponential piston flow model (EPM), can be calculated as TTPF = mean transit times (MTT) × (1–f), with MTT the mean transit zone, but observations at several monitoring wells indicate that the average thickness of t3h4e unsaturated zone varies seatime through the total flow volume, and f the fraction of ex- sonally only by approximately 1.5 m

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Summary

Introduction

The role of oxygen-18, deuterium and tritium in hydrology, New Zeal. J.

Water dating
Age interpretation and mean transit time
Groundwater volume
Dissolved SiO2 as a secondary age tracer
10 Changing stream water quality with changing water source
11 Conclusions
Findings
Full Text
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