@Article{Han_etal2014, author="Han, D. M. and Song, X. F. and Currell, M. J. and Yang, J. L. and Xiao, G. Q.", title="Chemical and isotopic constraints on evolution of groundwater salinization in the coastal plain aquifer of Laizhou Bay, China", journal="Journal of Hydrology", year="2014", volume="508", pages="12--27", optkeywords="Laizhou Bay", optkeywords="Coastal aquifers", optkeywords="Groundwater hydrochemistry", optkeywords="Stable isotopes", optkeywords="Saltwater intrusion", abstract="Summary A hydrochemical-isotopic investigation of the Laizhou Bay Quaternary aquifer in north China provides new insights into the hydrodynamic and geochemical relationships between freshwater, seawater and brine at different depths in coastal sediments. Saltwater intrusion mainly occurs due to two cones of depression caused by concentrated exploitation of fresh groundwater in the south, and brine water for salt production in the north. Groundwater is characterized by hydrochemical zonation of water types (ranging from Ca--HCO3 to Na--Cl) from south to north, controlled by migration and mixing of saline water bodies with the regional groundwater. The strong adherence of the majority of ion/Cl ratios to mixing lines between freshwater and saline water end-members (brine or seawater) indicates the importance of mixing under natural and/or anthropogenic influences. Examination of the groundwater stable isotope $\delta$18O and $\delta$2H values (between -9.5{\texttenthousand} and -3.0{\texttenthousand} and -75{\texttenthousand} and -40{\texttenthousand}, respectively) and chloride contents (\~{}2 to 1000meq/L) of the groundwater indicate that the saline end-member is brine rather than seawater, and most groundwater samples plot on mixing trajectories between fresh groundwater ($\delta$18O of between -6.0{\texttenthousand} and -9.0{\texttenthousand}; Cl<5meq/L) and sampled brines ($\delta$18O of approximately -3.0{\texttenthousand} and Cl>1000meq/L). Locally elevated Na/Cl ratios likely result from ion exchange in areas of long-term freshening. The brines, with radiocarbon activities of \~{}30 to 60 pMC likely formed during the Holocene as a result of the sequence of transgression-regression and evaporation; while deep, fresh groundwater with depleted stable isotopic values ($\delta$18O=-9.7{\texttenthousand} and $\delta$2H=-71{\texttenthousand}) and low radiocarbon activity (<20 pMC) was probably recharged during a cooler period in the late Pleistocene, as is common throughout northern China. An increase in the salinity and tritium concentration in some shallow groundwater sampled in the 1990s and re-sampled here indicates that intensive brine extraction has locally resulted in rapid mixing of young, fresh groundwater and saline brine. The $\delta$18O and $\delta$2H values of brines (\~{}-3.0{\texttenthousand} and -35{\texttenthousand}) are much lower than that of modern seawater, which could be explained by 1) mixing of original ($\delta$18O enriched) brine that was more saline than presently observed, with fresh groundwater recharged by precipitation and/or 2) dilution of the palaeo-seawater with continental runoff prior to and/or during brine formation. The first mechanism is supported by relatively high Br/Cl molar ratios (1.7{\texttimes}10-3--2.5{\texttimes}10-3) in brine water compared with \~{}1.5{\texttimes}10-3 in seawater, which could indicate that the brines originally reached halite saturation and were subsequently diluted with fresher groundwater over the long-term. Decreasing 14C activities with increasing sampling depth and increasing proximity to the coastline indicate that the south coastal aquifer in Laizhou Bay is dominated by regional lateral flow, on millennial timescales.", optnote="exported from refbase (http://www.uhydro.de/refbase/show.php?record=174), last updated on Sat, 20 Jun 2020 08:53:46 +0200", issn="0022-1694", opturl="http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022169413007695" }