Authors
Sarah E Godsey, James W Kirchner, David W Clow
Publication date
2009/6/30
Journal
Hydrological Processes
Volume
23
Issue
13
Pages
1844-1864
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Description
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 flux by a variable flux of water, and that rates of solute production and/or mobilization must be nearly proportional to water fluxes, both on storm and inter‐annual timescales. We compared these catchments' …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
SE Godsey, JW Kirchner, DW Clow - Hydrological Processes: An International Journal, 2009