Aqueous Geochemistry of Lake Tuscaloosa, West-Central Alabama, USA: Drought Response
Abstract
Lake Tuscaloosa was created in 1969 by the impoundment of the North River near Northport and Tuscaloosa, AL. The reservoir is 25 miles long with a capacity of 123,000 acre-feet, a surface area of 5,885 acres, and an estimated safe yield of 200 M gal/d. It is the receiving water body of a 432 square mile watershed. This project studies the aqueous geochemistry of surface waters using samples representative of different seasonal conditions and land cover. Of the 21 sample locations in this study, three are located on tributaries, four transect the axis of the lake, and the rest are divided among semi-restricted coves representing forested and residential land cover. Sample chemistry is quantified for major, minor, and trace cations, anions, and nutrients, total dissolved nitrogen, DOC, and ALK. The current study presents data collected from the lake and its tributaries during recent severe drought conditions impacting much of the southeastern United States. These data are compared with data from an identical study conducted five years ago during a more normal water year. For each sampling year, four seasonal sampling events were conducted. Both intra- and inter-annual results are reported. Historical USGS data for seven locations sampled since 1986 on a semi-annual basis illustrate a general increase in TDS and nutrients since the lake's creation. Some USGS sample locations coincide with those of the current study. Recently collected data agrees well with recent USGS data for the same locations. It is likely that trends observed in this study are related to anthropogenic effects along the lake shore, as evidenced by the geochemical differences between residential and forested coves. Long-term trends observed in historical data are likely the result of land use in the watershed related to mining, agriculture, and residential development. It is also observed that lower flow conditions are associated with increased solute concentrations, indicating that dilution by rainfall-runoff events is an important factor moderating water quality. These data provide some insight into the impacts prolonged drought may have on Lake Tuscaloosa water quality.
- Publication:
-
AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2008
- Bibcode:
- 2008AGUFMGC51A0659C
- Keywords:
-
- 1022 Composition of the hydrosphere;
- 1632 Land cover change;
- 1637 Regional climate change