Chappelle et al. (1995) Water Resources Research, Vol 31, No. 2

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Deducing the distribution of terminal electron-accepting processes (TEAPs) in hydrologically diverse groundwater systems Chappelle et al. (1995) Water Resources Research, Vol 31, No. 2

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Deducing the distribution of terminal electron-accepting processes (TEAPs) in hydrologically diverse groundwater systems. Chappelle et al. (1995) Water Resources Research, Vol 31, No. 2. Introduction. The Importance The Problem The Alternative. I TEAPs It Real. The Basics - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Chappelle et al. (1995) Water Resources Research, Vol 31, No. 2

Page 1: Chappelle et al. (1995) Water Resources Research,  Vol  31, No. 2

Deducing the distribution of terminal electron-accepting processes (TEAPs) in hydrologically

diverse groundwater systems

Chappelle et al. (1995)Water Resources Research, Vol 31, No. 2

Page 2: Chappelle et al. (1995) Water Resources Research,  Vol  31, No. 2

Introduction

•The Importance•The Problem•The Alternative

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I TEAPs It Real

• The Basics• Water chem can determine TEAPs by

1. Tracking electron acceptor consumption2. Tracking final product accumulation3. Tracking intermediate product concentrations

• Previous studies fail to TEAPs it real• Hydrogen (H2) concentrations an important

intermediate product indicator of TEAPs

Page 4: Chappelle et al. (1995) Water Resources Research,  Vol  31, No. 2

PURPOSE OF

THEPAPER

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Hierarchical Framework for Identifying TEAPs

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STUDYSITES

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Black Creek Aquifer, South Carolina

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Black Creek Aquifer, South Carolina

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Floridan Aquifer - Baldosta, Georgia

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Floridan Aquifer - Baldosta, Georgia

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Alluvial-Lacustrine Aquifers – San Joaquin Valley

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Alluvial-Lacustrine AquifersSan Joaquin Valley

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Petroleum Hydrocarbon-Contaminated Aquifer: Hanahan, South Carolina

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Petroleum Hydrocarbon- Contaminated Aquifer:

Hanahan, South Carolina

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CONCLUSIONS

• The main, important observation is that H2 concentration ranges for different TEAPs are consistent between the diverse hydrologic systems studied

• H2 Concentrations are a useful indicator for TEAPs and increase confidence when used in conjunction with electron acceptor consumption and final product production.