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Archive | 2007

Yucca Mountain Area Saturated Zone Dissolved Organic Carbon Isotopic Data

James M. Thomas; David L. Decker; Gary Patterson; Zell Peterman; Todd Mihevc; Jessica Larsen; Ronald L. Hershey

Groundwater samples in the Yucca Mountain area were collected for chemical and isotopic analyses and measurements of water temperature, pH, specific conductivity, and alkalinity were obtained at the well or spring at the time of sampling. For this project, groundwater samples were analyzed for major-ion chemistry, deuterium, oxygen-18, and carbon isotopes of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) and dissolved organic carbon (DOC). The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) performed all the fieldwork on this project including measurement of water chemistry field parameters and sample collection. The major ions dissolved in the groundwater, deuterium, oxygen-18, and carbon isotopes of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) were analyzed by the USGS. All preparation and processing of samples for DOC carbon isotopic analyses and geochemical modeling were performed by the Desert Research Institute (DRI). Analysis of the DOC carbon dioxide gas produced at DRI to obtain carbon-13 and carbon-14 values was conducted at the University of Arizona Accelerator Facility (a NSHE Yucca Mountain project QA qualified contract facility). The major-ion chemistry, deuterium, oxygen-18, and carbon isotopes of DIC were used in geochemical modeling (NETPATH) to determine groundwater sources, flow paths, mixing, and ages. The carbon isotopes of DOC were used to calculate groundwater ages that are independent of DIC model corrected carbon-14 ages. The DIC model corrected carbon-14 calculated ages were used to evaluate groundwater travel times for mixtures of water including water beneath Yucca Mountain. When possible, groundwater travel times were calculated for groundwater flow from beneath Yucca Mountain to down gradient sample sites. DOC carbon-14 groundwater ages were also calculated for groundwaters in the Yucca Mountain area. When possible, groundwater travel times were estimated for groundwater flow from beneath Yucca Mountain to down gradient groundwater sample sites using the DOC calculated groundwater ages. The DIC calculated groundwater ages were compared with DOC calculated groundwater ages and both of these ages were compared to travel times developed in ground-water flow and transport models. If nuclear waste is stored in Yucca Mountain, the saturated zone is the final barrier against the release of radionuclides to the environment. The most recent rendition of the TSPA takes little credit for the presence of the saturated zone and is a testament to the inadequate understanding of this important barrier. If radionuclides reach the saturated zone beneath Yucca Mountain, then there is a travel time before they would leave the Yucca Mountain area and flow down gradient to the Amargosa Valley area. Knowing how long it takes groundwater in the saturated zone to flow from beneath Yucca Mountain to down gradient areas is critical information for potential radionuclide transport. Radionuclide transport in groundwater may be the quickest pathway for radionuclides in the proposed Yucca Mountain repository to reach land surface by way of groundwater pumped in Amargosa Valley. An alternative approach to ground-water flow and transport models to determine the travel time of radionuclides from beneath Yucca Mountain to down gradient areas in the saturated zone is by carbon-14 dating of both inorganic and organic carbon dissolved in the groundwater. A standard method of determining ground-water ages is to measure the carbon-13 and carbon-14 of DIC in the groundwater and then correct the measured carbon-14 along a flow path for geochemical reactions that involve carbon containing phases. These geochemical reactions are constrained by carbon-13 and isotopic fractionations. Without correcting for geochemical reactions, the ground-water ages calculated from only the differences in carbon-14 measured along a flow path (assuming the decrease in carbon-14 is due strictly to radioactive decay) could be tens of thousands of years too old. The computer program NETPATH, developed by the USGS, is the best geochemical program for correcting carbon-14 activities for geochemical reactions. The DIC carbon-14 corrected ages can be further constrained by measuring the carbon isotopes of DOC. Because the only source of organic carbon in aquifers is almost always greater than 40,000 years old, any organic carbon that may be added to the groundwater would contain no carbon-14. Thus, ground-water ages determined by carbon isotopes of DOC should be maximum ages that can be used to constrain DIC corrected ages.


Archive | 2003

Evaluation of Surface Complexation Models for Radionuclide Transport at the Nevada Test Site: Data Availability and Parameter Evaluation

David L. Decker; Charalambos Papelis

...................................................................................................................... iii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ................................................................................................. iv TABLES ............................................................................................................................ vi LIST OF ACRONYMS AND ABBREVIATIONS .......................................................... v


Journal of Environmental Quality | 1999

Evaluation of Flow and Solute Transport Parameters for Heap Leach Recovery Materials

David L. Decker; Scott W. Tyler


Journal of Hydrology | 2011

The influence of irrigation water on the hydrology and lake water budgets of two small arid-climate lakes in Khorezm, Uzbekistan

Julian Scott; Michael R. Rosen; Laurel Saito; David L. Decker


Applied Geochemistry | 2015

Comparing activated alumina with indigenous laterite and bauxite as potential sorbents for removing fluoride from drinking water in Ghana

Laura Craig; Lisa L. Stillings; David L. Decker; James M. Thomas


Vadose Zone Journal | 2006

Variably Saturated Reactive Transport of Arsenic in Heap-Leach Facilities

David L. Decker; Jirka Šimůnek; Scott W. Tyler; Charalambos Papelis; Mark J. Logsdon


Applied Geochemistry | 2017

Assessing changes in the physico-chemical properties and fluoride adsorption capacity of activated alumina under varied conditions

Laura Craig; Lisa L. Stillings; David L. Decker


Vadose Zone Journal | 2006

Arsenate and Arsenite Sorption on Carbonate Hosted Precious Metals Ore

David L. Decker; Charalambos Papelis; Scott W. Tyler; Mark J. Logsdon; Jirka Šimůnek


Chemical Geology | 2018

Determining the optimum locations for pumping low-fluoride groundwater to distribute to communities in a fluoridic area in the Upper East Region, Ghana

Laura Craig; James M. Thomas; Alexandra Lutz; David L. Decker


Applied Geochemistry | 2015

Corrigendum to “Comparing activated alumina with indigenous laterite and bauxite as potential sorbents for removing fluoride from drinking water in Ghana” [Appl. Geochem. 56 (2015) 50–66]

Laura Craig; Lisa L. Stillings; David L. Decker; James M. Thomas

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James M. Thomas

Desert Research Institute

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Laura Craig

Desert Research Institute

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Alexandra Lutz

Desert Research Institute

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Greg Schmett

Desert Research Institute

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