11:00 AM - 11:15 AM
[HCG11-08] The hydrology and hydrochemistry of deltas and their significance to deltaic hydrochemical/diagenetic processes and deltaic ecology
★Invited papers
Keywords:deltas, intra-estuarine-deltas, Western-Australia, hydrology, hydrochemistry
Local areas on the subaerial delta plain, comprising contrasting mud-floored lagoons/ponds or sandy cheniers, or abandoned channels, are affected by river inflow, or rain, or evaporation, and develop salinities and hydrochemically specific surface and near-surface water bodies and groundwater bodies, respectively, that perturbate the salinity/hydrochemistry of the main body of the delta groundwater. The delta is characterised by fluctuating watertables and hydrochemistry of groundwater and the marine and estuarine water between wet and dry seasons, the dynamics of discharge, intrusion and seepage that occur between the delta groundwater and marine or estuarine water, and the wetlands on the delta. The various water bodies and their hydrodynamic and hydrochemical characteristics and interactions are underlying determinants of the biota resident on the deltaic wetlands and determinants of diagenetic products that occur within a delta. Western Australian deltas and intra-estuarine deltas serve as case studies of the hydrology and hydrochemistry of deltaic systems.