37 research outputs found

    Nutrient Distributions In An Estuary - Evidence Of Chemical Precipitation Of Dissolved Silicate And Phosphate

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    Continuous autoanalytical recordings of the axial distributions of dissolved nitrate, silicate and phosphate in the influent freshwater and saline waters of the Tamar Estuary, south-west England have been obtained. Short-term variability in the distributions was assessed by repetitive profiling at approximately 3-h intervals on a single day and seasonal comparisons were obtained from ten surveys carried out between June 1977 and August 1978. Whereas nitrate is always essentially conserved throughout the upper estuary, the silicate- and phosphate-salinity relationships consistently indicate a non-biological removal of these nutrients within the low (0–10%) salinity range. Attempts to quantify precisely the degree of removal and to correlate this with changes in environmental properties (pH, turbidity, chlorophyll fluorescence, salinity, freshwater composition) were mainly inconclusive due to short-term fluctuations in the riverine concentrations of silicate and phosphate advected into the reactive region and to the rapid changes in turbidity brought about by tidally-induced resuspension and deposition of bottom sediment

    Filtration Unit For Use With Continuous Autoanalytical Systems Applied To Highly Turbid Waters

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    A simple unit for filtration prior to continuous autoanalysis of highly turbid waters is described. Seawater can be supplied at a rate of 10 ml min−1, after filtration through a 0.45 μm pore-sized membrane filter (47 mm diameter), for at least 45 min from sea water containing 1000 parts/106 of suspended solids

    Chemical Variability In The Tamar Estuary Southwest England

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    Procedures for the continuous in situ recording of salinity, temperature, dissolved oxygen concentration, pH and turbidity throughout an estuarine mixing profile have been developed. Application of these procedures in a study of the Tamar Estuary, south-west England has demonstrated the considerable temporal (short-term and seasonal) and geographical variability of these properties. The causes and interrelationships of this variability and their general implications with respect to field investigations of estuarine chemical interactions are discussed
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