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Use of tree-ring chemistry to document historical ground-water contamination events

September 1, 1990

The annual growth rings of tulip trees (Liriodendron tulipifera L.) appear to preserve a chemical record of ground-water contamination at a landfill in Maryland. Zones of elevated iron and chlorine concentrations in growth rings from trees immediately downgradient from the landfill are closely correlated temporally with activities in the landfill expected to generate iron and chloride contamination in the ground water. Successively later iron peaks in trees increasingly distant from the landfill along the general direction of ground-water flow imply movement of iron-contaminated ground water away from the landfill. The historical velocity of iron movement (2 to 9 m/yr) and chloride movement (at least 40 m/yr) in ground water at the site was estimated from element-concentration trends of trees at successive distances from the landfill. The tree-ring-derived chloride-transport velocity approximates the known ground-water velocity (30 to 80 m/yr). A minimum horizontal hydraulic conductivity (0.01 to .02 cm/s) calculated from chloride velocity agrees well with values derived from aquifer tests (about 0.07 cm/s) and from ground-water modeling results (0.009 to 0.04 cm/s).

Publication Year 1990
Title Use of tree-ring chemistry to document historical ground-water contamination events
DOI 10.1111/j.1745-6584.1990.tb01983.x
Authors Don A. Vroblesky, Thomas M. Yanosky
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Groundwater
Index ID 70185816
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Toxic Substances Hydrology Program