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Cl and Na Fluxes in an Andean Foreland Basin of the Peruvian Amazon: An Anthropogenic Impact Evidence
Authors:Jean-Sébastien Moquet  Laurence Maurice  Alain Crave  Jérôme Viers  Nore Arevalo  Christelle Lagane  Waldo Lavado-Casimiro  Jean-Loup Guyot
Affiliation:1. OMP-GET, Laboratoire Géosciences Environnement Toulouse, CNRS-IRD-Université de Toulouse III, 14 Avenue Edouard Belin, 31400, Toulouse, France
2. Instituto de Geociencias, Universidade de Sao Paulo, Rua do lago, 562 - cidade universitaria, S?o Paulo, 05508-080, SP, Brazil
3. IRD-Ecuador, Whymper N30-62 y Coru?a, Quito, Ecuador
4. CNRS - Géosciences Rennes (UMR CNRS 6118)/OSUR, Université de Rennes 1, Rennes, France
5. Université de Toulouse III, 14 Avenue Edouard Belin, Toulouse, 31400, France
6. UNALM - FIA, Av. La Molina s/n La Molina, Lima, Peru
7. IRD-GET, 14 Avenue Edouard Belin, Toulouse, 31400, France
8. SENAMHI, Casilla 11, Lima 11, 1308, Peru
9. IRD-Peru, Casilla Postal 18-1209, Lima, Lima 18, Peru
Abstract:The dissolved load of the Amazon River is generally considered to be lowly impacted by anthropogenic activities. In this work, based on the chemical and hydrological database of the Environmental Research Observatory—HYBAM (http://www.ore-hybam.org), we explore the importance of the Peruvian Foreland petroleum activity on the dissolved Na and Cl fluxes of the Amazon River. The main result of this study allows us suggesting that oil extraction activity, concentrated in the El Tigre River basin, a small foreland watershed in the Peruvian Amazon, influenced drastically the Na and Cl exportation of the Amazon River during the 2006–2007 period. During these years,  the dissolved exportations of this basin represented almost 20 % of the annual dissolved Cl Amazon flux and almost 12 % of the annual dissolved Na Amazon flux for a mean annual discharge <1 % of the Amazon River discharge. Since the last decades, the anthropogenic activities are increasing over the whole Amazon basin, especially in Andean countries. In this context, our results demonstrate that extractive activity cannot be considered as negligible on the hydro-chemistry of the Amazonian Rivers especially for the weathering budget estimation based on river-dissolved loads. Moreover, Cl and Na can be used to trace the formation waters derived from oil extraction at a large spatial scale. The environmental impacts of contaminants associated with deep water released to the hydrosystem (polycyclic aromatics hydrocarbons, metallic trace elements, etc.) at local and regional scales are still underestimated and should be monitored to map their local and regional influence and to prevent their risks on human health.
Keywords:
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