News Release
Freshwater and Saltwater Interactions in Coastal Groundwater Systems May Provide Clues to Chemicals Entering Coastal Waters
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Media Relations Office
August 31, 2005
(508) 289-3340
Shelley Dawicki
Scientists have recently recognized an imbalance in the flow of salty groundwater
into the coastal ocean: considerable saltwater discharge into the ocean
has been observed, but little or no return flow has been seen. Now it appears
that the timing of the discharge may be key to the health of our coastal
waters.
New measurements and models suggest that seasonal changes in the water
table may provide clues to how water is exchanged and why the largest discharge
occurs during the summer, when the coastal ocean may be most vulnerable to
the dissolved chemicals in the groundwater because biological activity is
at its highest and river inflow at its lowest.
Fresh and salty groundwater flows into coastal waters as submarine groundwater
discharge and is an important source of nutrients, contaminants and trace
elements to the coastal ocean. Recent research has revealed that a large
portion of submarine groundwater discharge is saline water. Although this
water was once ocean water, the mechanism controlling its flow into and out
of the sediments has not been previously determined. Using seepage meters
and geochemical tracers, scientists have directly measured and inferred groundwater
flow from land to sea. But they have not previously been able to observe
the opposite, large-scale flow or intrusion of seawater into coastal aquifers
to balance this exchange.
In a paper published August 25, 2005 in Nature, scientists from the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology (MIT) and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI)
made both direct and indirect measurements of flows back and forth at Waquoit
Bay, Massachusetts at various seasons of the year and compared those results
with a general model of a coastal groundwater system. Their findings reveal
a lag in the inflows and outflows related to seasonal changes in the water
table.
Study co-author Ann Mulligan of the WHOI Marine Policy Center says seawater
is drawn into aquifers as the freshwater-saltwater interface or boundary
moves landward during winter. The water discharges back into coastal waters
as the boundary moves seaward in summer. Since summer is typically associated
with higher temperatures and evaporation, saltwater should intrude inland
rather than discharge at the coast. However, the numerical model reveals
that there may be a time lag of several months between precipitation, groundwater
recharge, and associated impacts on saltwater flowing into or out of the
aquifer.
“We looked at several mechanisms other than seasonal exchange that could
drive saltwater circulation, including tides, wave run-up on the beach, and
entrainment or trapping of saltwater into fresh,” Mulligan said. “ But each
of these flows balanced over a tidal cycle and occurs in a well-defined relatively
small area, and could not account for the large discharge we observed during
summer in Waquoit Bay.“
The study was conducted at the Waquoit Bay National Estuarine Research
Reserve in Falmouth, Massachusetts and supported by the National Science
Foundation.
The authors say the global extent of seasonal exchange of freshwater
and saltwater is unknown but could be an important factor in transporting
nutrients and contaminants trapped in sediments into coastal waters. Because
the chemistry of coastal waters is affected, it is important to understand
the link between the seasonal hydrologic cycle on land and the saline groundwater
system in coastal aquifers. Now that a major driving mechanism of saline
water flow has been determined, important follow-up studies will look at
the chemical content of the inflowing and outflowing water over a yearly
cycle. Most previous studies have looked at chemical loading from groundwater
over short time-periods, but this study shows that a major process is occurring
on a yearly cycle.
“The impact on coastal chemistry could be enormous,” Mulligan says. “Along
the U.S. east coast the greatest saltwater discharge may occur in summer,
when biological activity is at its highest and river inflow at its lowest.
The input of nutrients at certain times of the year may be key to the health
of our coastal waters.”
Originally published: August 31, 2005

