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WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH, VOL. 40, W07101, doi:10.1029/2003WR002919, 2004

Assessing denitrification in groundwater using natural gradient tracer tests with 15N: In situ measurement of a sequential multistep reaction

Richard L. Smith

U.S. Geological Survey, Boulder, Colorado, USA


John Karl Böhlke

U.S. Geological Survey, Reston, Virginia, USA


Stephen P. Garabedian

U.S. Geological Survey, Northborough, Massachusetts, USA


Kinga M. Revesz

U.S. Geological Survey, Reston, Virginia, USA


Tadashi Yoshinari

Wadsworth Center, New York State Department of Health, Albany, New York, USA


Abstract

Denitrification was measured within a nitrate-contaminated aquifer on Cape Cod, Massachusetts, using natural gradient tracer tests with 15N nitrate. The aquifer contained zones of relatively high concentrations of nitrite (up to 77 μM) and nitrous oxide (up to 143 μM) and has been the site of previous studies examining ground water denitrification using the acetylene block technique. Small-scale (15–24 m travel distance) tracer tests were conducted by injecting 15N nitrate and bromide as tracers into a depth interval that contained nitrate, nitrite, nitrous oxide, and excess nitrogen gas. The timing of the bromide breakthrough curves at down-gradient wells matched peaks in 15N abundance above background for nitrate, nitrite, nitrous oxide, and nitrogen gas after more than 40 days of travel. Results were simulated with a one-dimensional transport model using linked reaction kinetics for the individual steps of the denitrification reaction pathway. It was necessary to include within the model spatial variations in background concentrations of all nitrogen oxide species. The model indicated that nitrite production (0.036–0.047 μmol N (L aquifer)−1 d−1) was faster than the subsequent denitrification steps (0.013–0.016 μmol N (L aquifer)−1 d−1 for nitrous oxide and 0.013–0.020 μmol N (L aquifer)−1 d−1 for nitrogen gas) and that the total rate of reaction was slower than indicated by both acetylene block tracer tests and laboratory incubations. The rate of nitrate removal by denitrification was much slower than the rate of transport, indicating that nitrate would migrate several kilometers down-gradient before being completely consumed.

Received 1 December 2003; accepted 12 May 2004; published 28 July 2004.

Keywords: groundwater; denitrification; nitrate; nitrogen isotopes; tracer test; Cape Cod.

Index Terms: 1831 Hydrology: Groundwater quality; 1832 Hydrology: Groundwater transport.


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Citation: Smith, R. L., J. K. Böhlke, S. P. Garabedian, K. M. Revesz, and T. Yoshinari (2004), Assessing denitrification in groundwater using natural gradient tracer tests with 15N: In situ measurement of a sequential multistep reaction, Water Resour. Res., 40, W07101, doi:10.1029/2003WR002919.