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New explanation for extreme u-234 u-238 disequilibria in a dolomitic aquifer

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dc.contributor.author Kronfeld, J
dc.contributor.author Vogel, JC
dc.contributor.author Talma, AS
dc.date.accessioned 2007-06-12T08:13:07Z
dc.date.available 2007-06-12T08:13:07Z
dc.date.issued 1994-05
dc.identifier.citation Kronfeld, J, Vogel, JC and Talma, AS. 1994. New explanation for extreme u-234 u-238 disequilibria in a dolomitic aquifer. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, vol. 123, 04 January, pp 81-93 en
dc.identifier.issn 0012-821X
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10204/598
dc.description Copyright: 1994 Elsevier Science BV en
dc.description.abstract High U-234/U-238 activity ratios are found in the shallow groundwater of the phreatic Transvaal Dolomite Aquifer. The aquifer is uranium poor, while the waters are oxygen rich and young. Tritium and C-14 are used to show that the disequilibrium increases the longer the water resides in contact with the dolomite host. The Ra-228 and Rn-222 isotopes were used as supporting evidence that ion exchange between the U-238 series nuclides in the water and the carbonate wall rock is necessary in assisting in the fractionation process. The Wolkberg cave speleothems preserve a record of the uranium isotopic fractionations that evolved as water flowed through the aquifer. Extremely variable and elevated U-234/U-238 ratios (of 2-12) are characteristic. Individual caverns may exhibit very large U-234/U-238 variability in their drip water and in derivative carbonate precipitates (speleothems). Deeper chambers, where water has spent a longer time in contact with the aquifer, tend to exhibit a greater degree of uranium isotopic fractionation in their speleothems. The recorded fractionation process has been an ongoing one from at least the middle-late Pleistocene to the present. The speleothem study supports the contention that ion exchange processes that produce sufficient enrichment of uranium on carbonate can provide ideal conditions for generating uranium isotopic fractionation in the water of carbonate aquifers (in the absence of redox changes and within a uranium-poor environment). en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.publisher Elsevier Science BV en
dc.subject Disequilibrium en
dc.subject Hydrologic deduction en
dc.subject Dolomite aquifer en
dc.subject Uranium Isotopic fractionations en
dc.title New explanation for extreme u-234 u-238 disequilibria in a dolomitic aquifer en
dc.type Article en
dc.identifier.apacitation Kronfeld, J., Vogel, J., & Talma, A. (1994). New explanation for extreme u-234 u-238 disequilibria in a dolomitic aquifer. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/598 en_ZA
dc.identifier.chicagocitation Kronfeld, J, JC Vogel, and AS Talma "New explanation for extreme u-234 u-238 disequilibria in a dolomitic aquifer." (1994) http://hdl.handle.net/10204/598 en_ZA
dc.identifier.vancouvercitation Kronfeld J, Vogel J, Talma A. New explanation for extreme u-234 u-238 disequilibria in a dolomitic aquifer. 1994; http://hdl.handle.net/10204/598. en_ZA
dc.identifier.ris TY - Article AU - Kronfeld, J AU - Vogel, JC AU - Talma, AS AB - High U-234/U-238 activity ratios are found in the shallow groundwater of the phreatic Transvaal Dolomite Aquifer. The aquifer is uranium poor, while the waters are oxygen rich and young. Tritium and C-14 are used to show that the disequilibrium increases the longer the water resides in contact with the dolomite host. The Ra-228 and Rn-222 isotopes were used as supporting evidence that ion exchange between the U-238 series nuclides in the water and the carbonate wall rock is necessary in assisting in the fractionation process. The Wolkberg cave speleothems preserve a record of the uranium isotopic fractionations that evolved as water flowed through the aquifer. Extremely variable and elevated U-234/U-238 ratios (of 2-12) are characteristic. Individual caverns may exhibit very large U-234/U-238 variability in their drip water and in derivative carbonate precipitates (speleothems). Deeper chambers, where water has spent a longer time in contact with the aquifer, tend to exhibit a greater degree of uranium isotopic fractionation in their speleothems. The recorded fractionation process has been an ongoing one from at least the middle-late Pleistocene to the present. The speleothem study supports the contention that ion exchange processes that produce sufficient enrichment of uranium on carbonate can provide ideal conditions for generating uranium isotopic fractionation in the water of carbonate aquifers (in the absence of redox changes and within a uranium-poor environment). DA - 1994-05 DB - ResearchSpace DP - CSIR KW - Disequilibrium KW - Hydrologic deduction KW - Dolomite aquifer KW - Uranium Isotopic fractionations LK - https://researchspace.csir.co.za PY - 1994 SM - 0012-821X T1 - New explanation for extreme u-234 u-238 disequilibria in a dolomitic aquifer TI - New explanation for extreme u-234 u-238 disequilibria in a dolomitic aquifer UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10204/598 ER - en_ZA


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