skip to content skip to navigtion accessibility statement

New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research abstracts


Water chemistry of lakes in the Taupo Volcanic Zone, New Zealand

M. H. TIMPERLEY R. J. VIGOR-BROWN

Division of Marine and Freshwater Science
Taupo Research Laboratory
Department of Scientific and Industrial Research
P. O. Box 415, Taupo
New Zealand

Abstract Dissolved salts in lake waters of the Taupo Volcanic Zone consist predominantly of HCO3" salts from 'normal' weathering of rocks and soils by carbonic acid, Cl~ salts from precipitation and geothermal water, and SO42~ salts from injection into the lakes or catchments of sulphuric acid from geothermal steam. Precipitation and cold spring waters are considered to be the input and final product, respectively, of normal weathering. The concentrations of major ions (Na+, K+, Ca2+, Mg2+, HCO3-, Cl", SO42-) in these waters and in geothermal water and steam were used to calculate the origins of the dissolved salts in each lake. Rhyolitic strata dominate most lake catchments, but in some the presence of andesite, basalt, or hydrothermal ejecta influences the major ion ratios in the fraction of the dissolved salts derived from weathering. Each of the 32 lakes studied was classified according to the origins of its lakewater dissolved salts and the effect on these salts of its catchment geology.

Keywords Taupo Volcanic Zone; lake water; dissolved salts; major ions; water; chemistry; precipitation; geothermal water

New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research, 1986, Vol. 20: 173-183 Received 25 October 1984; accepted 22 July 1985

PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (778K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)


This year's abstracts | Journal home page | All abstracts | Publishing home page

© The Royal Society of New Zealand
MoST Content Management V3.0.3246