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Environmental isotopes to test hypotheses for fluid mud (mud bank) generation mechanisms along the southwest coast of India

DRS at CSIR-National Institute of Oceanography

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Title Environmental isotopes to test hypotheses for fluid mud (mud bank) generation mechanisms along the southwest coast of India
 
Creator Jacob, N.
Ansari, M.A.
Revichandran, C.
 
Subject OCEANOGRAPHY AND LIMNOLOGY
GEOLOGY AND GEOPHYSICS
 
Description Occurrence of fluid mud (mud banks) in the southwest coast of India is an enigma for the scientific community. Over the years, several multi-disciplinary studies were conducted and various hypotheses were postulated on the occurrence and sustenance of fluid mud. Nevertheless, none of them could be proved or disproved with field data. In the present study, an attempt was made to assess the validity of some of the prevailing hypothesis on its occurrence such as subterranean conduit flow of mud/water from a coastal lagoon, submarine groundwater discharge, river flows etc. by integrating field surveys, refining the hydrogeological understanding of the area and application of environmental isotopes (222Rn, δ18O, δ2H and 3H) in the ‘Alappuzha mud bank’ region, Kerala, during its formation in the southwest monsoon period. In-situ 222Rn monitoring survey in the coastal waters of Pallana showed that 222Rn activities in the fluid mud region were negligible compared to the suspected continental end members such as Pamba River, Vembanad Lagoon, shallow and deep groundwater indicating that there was no freshwater inputs from these sources. Comparison of the characteristic stable isotopic signatures of δ18O and δ2H in the samples from the fluid mud region and the suspected continental end members implied that there was no mixing of these water sources with the seawater. 3H results indicated that the shallow groundwater is modern and recharged annually from precipitation while deep groundwater in the Warkali aquifer within the study area is old (>50 years). It also indicated that there is no vertical interconnection between the Vembanad Lagoon and the deep Warkali aquifers. Hence, from the study, it appears that river flows, submarine groundwater discharge or subterranean (conduit flow) flow from the Vembanad Lagoon may not be responsible for the occurrence and sustenance of fluid mud in Pallana coast, Alappuzha
 
Date 2015-10-27T09:47:50Z
2015-10-27T09:47:50Z
2015
 
Type Journal Article
 
Identifier Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science, vol.164; 2015; 115-123
http://drs.nio.org/drs/handle/2264/4826
 
Language en
 
Rights An edited version of this paper was published by Elsevier. Copyright [2015] Elsevier
 
Publisher Elsevier