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The significance of various sediment magnetic mineral fractions for tracing sediment sources in Killimicat Creek
Institution:1. Instituto de Química de San Luis, INQUISAL, Centro Científico-Tecnológico de San Luis (CCT-San Luis), Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas - Universidad Nacional de San Luis, Chacabuco y Pedernera, Ciudad de San Luis 5700, Argentina;2. Instituto de Ciencias Básicas, FFHA, Universidad Nacional de San Juan, Av. Libertador San Martin 1109 - Oeste, 5400 San Juan, Argentina;3. Instituto de Investigaciones Mineras, Facultad de Ingeniería, Universidad Nacional de San Juan, Av. Libertador San Martin 1109 - Oeste, 5400 San Juan, Argentina;1. State Key Laboratory of Pollution Control and Resources Reuse, Tongji University, China;2. College of Civil Engineering, Tongji University, Shanghai 200092, China;3. Key Laboratory of Yangtze Water Environment for Ministry of Education, Tongji University, Shanghai 200092, China
Abstract:The mineral magnetic properties of sediment are increasingly being used to determine the sources of sediment, and associated nutrients and contaminants in drainage basins. This study was undertaken to measure the relative contributions of the magnetic mineral components in sediment (i.e., components associated with surface bound Fe, the heavy mineral fraction, and as inclusions in particles) to determine the extent to which they represent the bulk of the sediment. Deposited channel sediment samples from the tributaries and downstream reach at the first major confluence in the headwaters of Killimicat Creek, New South Wales, were sieved to separate 6 particle size fractions, and the mineral magnetic properties measured to determine the relative contribution of sediment from the smaller tributary basin. The finest sand component (63–125 μm) was then separated into light and heavy mineral fractions, and magnetic measurements made on each fraction. Magnetic parameter data from the 63–125 μm fraction, measured before density separation, show a dominance of sediment (70±12%) derived from the smaller tributary basin. Measurements of the light sediment fraction give a similar result (73±13%). The proportion of the heavy mineral fraction delivered from the smaller tributary is 78±38%. The light mineral fraction of all of the samples were treated with HCl to remove surface bound Fe, and subsequent magnetic measurements show that 41–94% of the mass specific magnetic susceptibility is attributable to magnetic minerals associated with surface bound Fe. The heavy mineral component, while <4% by weight of the 63–125 μm fraction, contributes 5–40% of the total magnetic susceptibility. The results show that most of the magnetic mineral component (>60%) is associated with sediment particles, rather than the discrete heavy mineral component.
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