2024
DOI: 10.1002/hyp.15078
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Water‐rock interactions drive chemostasis

Sara Warix,
Alexis Navarre‐Sitchler,
Kamini Singha

Abstract: The western U.S. is experiencing shifts in recharge due to climate change, and it is currently unclear how hydrologic shifts will impact geochemical weathering and stream concentration–discharge (C–Q) patterns. Hydrologists often use C–Q analyses to assess feedbacks between stream discharge and geochemistry, given abundant stream discharge and chemistry data. Chemostasis is commonly observed, indicating that geochemical controls, rather than changes in discharge, are shaping stream C–Q patterns. However, few C… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Fluid samples of gas (CO 2 , O 2 ) and solutes provide insights into modern processes governing weathering, while soil and rock material provide insights into weathering over geologic time . When we analyze the composition of groundwater across a catchment it can divulge a variability in residence times and the minerals upon which the water interacted (e.g., Warix et al, 2023Warix et al, , 2024Wen et al, 2022). Within a catchment, groundwater residence time can vary greatly.…”
Section: Direct Sampling and Measurementsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Fluid samples of gas (CO 2 , O 2 ) and solutes provide insights into modern processes governing weathering, while soil and rock material provide insights into weathering over geologic time . When we analyze the composition of groundwater across a catchment it can divulge a variability in residence times and the minerals upon which the water interacted (e.g., Warix et al, 2023Warix et al, , 2024Wen et al, 2022). Within a catchment, groundwater residence time can vary greatly.…”
Section: Direct Sampling and Measurementsmentioning
confidence: 99%