Submarine Groundwater and Vent Discharge in a Volcanic Area Associated With Coastal Acidification

We investigated submarine groundwater discharge (SGD) in a volcanic coastal area that hosts the world's most biodiverse reefs. Measurements of 222Rn activity in coastal seawater, a tracer for groundwater, indicated prevalent SGD. In areas where seawater 222Rn activity was generally higher, we d...

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Main Authors: Cardenas, M. Bayani, RODOLFO, RAYMOND, Lapus, Mark R, Cabria, Hillel B, Fullon, Jose, Gojunco, Gordos R, Breecker, Daniel O, Cantarero, Danica M, Evaristo, Jaivime, Siringan, Fernando P, Zhang, Tongwei
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Published: Archīum Ateneo 2020
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Online Access:https://archium.ateneo.edu/es-faculty-pubs/66
https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1029/2019GL085730
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Institution: Ateneo De Manila University
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spelling ph-ateneo-arc.es-faculty-pubs-10652021-04-27T06:12:11Z Submarine Groundwater and Vent Discharge in a Volcanic Area Associated With Coastal Acidification Cardenas, M. Bayani RODOLFO, RAYMOND Lapus, Mark R Cabria, Hillel B Fullon, Jose Gojunco, Gordos R Breecker, Daniel O Cantarero, Danica M Evaristo, Jaivime Siringan, Fernando P Zhang, Tongwei We investigated submarine groundwater discharge (SGD) in a volcanic coastal area that hosts the world's most biodiverse reefs. Measurements of 222Rn activity in coastal seawater, a tracer for groundwater, indicated prevalent SGD. In areas where seawater 222Rn activity was generally higher, we discovered hydrothermal springs emitting acidic waters (pH ~5.4–6.0) and venting magmatic CO2 that brought local pCO2 levels up to 95,000 ppm. The collection of vents raised CO2 and lowered pH over 1–2 km of coastline. The hydrogen and oxygen isotope compositions of water and chloride concentration revealed that the springs discharge recirculated seawater mixed variably with terrestrial groundwater. Shallower springs and pore water have a higher proportion of terrestrial groundwater than deeper springs, which emit mostly recirculated seawater. This suggests that different SGD mechanisms are present. The SGD could be contributing to the evolution and function of the biodiverse ecosystem, but it also represents myriad pathways for contamination. 2020-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://archium.ateneo.edu/es-faculty-pubs/66 https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1029/2019GL085730 Environmental Science Faculty Publications Archīum Ateneo Submarine Groundwater Discharge Hydrothermal Springs Carbon Dioxide Ocean Acidification Environmental Sciences
institution Ateneo De Manila University
building Ateneo De Manila University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider Ateneo De Manila University Library
collection archium.Ateneo Institutional Repository
topic Submarine Groundwater Discharge
Hydrothermal Springs
Carbon Dioxide
Ocean Acidification
Environmental Sciences
spellingShingle Submarine Groundwater Discharge
Hydrothermal Springs
Carbon Dioxide
Ocean Acidification
Environmental Sciences
Cardenas, M. Bayani
RODOLFO, RAYMOND
Lapus, Mark R
Cabria, Hillel B
Fullon, Jose
Gojunco, Gordos R
Breecker, Daniel O
Cantarero, Danica M
Evaristo, Jaivime
Siringan, Fernando P
Zhang, Tongwei
Submarine Groundwater and Vent Discharge in a Volcanic Area Associated With Coastal Acidification
description We investigated submarine groundwater discharge (SGD) in a volcanic coastal area that hosts the world's most biodiverse reefs. Measurements of 222Rn activity in coastal seawater, a tracer for groundwater, indicated prevalent SGD. In areas where seawater 222Rn activity was generally higher, we discovered hydrothermal springs emitting acidic waters (pH ~5.4–6.0) and venting magmatic CO2 that brought local pCO2 levels up to 95,000 ppm. The collection of vents raised CO2 and lowered pH over 1–2 km of coastline. The hydrogen and oxygen isotope compositions of water and chloride concentration revealed that the springs discharge recirculated seawater mixed variably with terrestrial groundwater. Shallower springs and pore water have a higher proportion of terrestrial groundwater than deeper springs, which emit mostly recirculated seawater. This suggests that different SGD mechanisms are present. The SGD could be contributing to the evolution and function of the biodiverse ecosystem, but it also represents myriad pathways for contamination.
format text
author Cardenas, M. Bayani
RODOLFO, RAYMOND
Lapus, Mark R
Cabria, Hillel B
Fullon, Jose
Gojunco, Gordos R
Breecker, Daniel O
Cantarero, Danica M
Evaristo, Jaivime
Siringan, Fernando P
Zhang, Tongwei
author_facet Cardenas, M. Bayani
RODOLFO, RAYMOND
Lapus, Mark R
Cabria, Hillel B
Fullon, Jose
Gojunco, Gordos R
Breecker, Daniel O
Cantarero, Danica M
Evaristo, Jaivime
Siringan, Fernando P
Zhang, Tongwei
author_sort Cardenas, M. Bayani
title Submarine Groundwater and Vent Discharge in a Volcanic Area Associated With Coastal Acidification
title_short Submarine Groundwater and Vent Discharge in a Volcanic Area Associated With Coastal Acidification
title_full Submarine Groundwater and Vent Discharge in a Volcanic Area Associated With Coastal Acidification
title_fullStr Submarine Groundwater and Vent Discharge in a Volcanic Area Associated With Coastal Acidification
title_full_unstemmed Submarine Groundwater and Vent Discharge in a Volcanic Area Associated With Coastal Acidification
title_sort submarine groundwater and vent discharge in a volcanic area associated with coastal acidification
publisher Archīum Ateneo
publishDate 2020
url https://archium.ateneo.edu/es-faculty-pubs/66
https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1029/2019GL085730
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