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Revisiting Mt Fuji’s groundwater origins with helium, vanadium and environmental DNA tracers

Oliver S. Schilling, Kazuyo Nagaosa, T. U. Schilling, Matthias S. Brennwald, Rumi Sohrin, Yama Tomonaga, Philip Brunner, Rolf Kipfer, Kenji Kato

2023Nature Water35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Known locally as the water mountain, for millennia Japan's iconic Mt Fuji has provided safe drinking water to millions of people via a vast network of groundwater and freshwater springs. Groundwater, which is recharged at high elevations, flows down Fuji's flanks within three basaltic aquifers, ultimately forming countless pristine freshwater springs among Fuji's foothills. Here we challenge the current conceptual model of Fuji being a simple system of laminar groundwater flow with little to no vertical exchange between its three aquifers. This model contrasts strongly with Fuji's extreme tectonic instability due to its unique location on top of the only known continental trench-trench-trench triple junction, its complex geology and its unusual microbial spring water communities. On the basis of a unique combination of microbial environmental DNA, vanadium and helium tracers, we provide evidence for prevailing deep circulation and a previously unknown deep groundwater contribution to Fuji's freshwater springs. The most substantial deep groundwater upwelling has been found along Japan's most tectonically active region, the Fujikawa-kako Fault Zone. Our findings broaden the hydrogeological understanding of Fuji and demonstrate the vast potential of combining environmental DNA, on-site noble gas and trace element analyses for groundwater science.

Topics & Concepts

GroundwaterAquiferGeologyEarth scienceTrenchGroundwater flowHydrology (agriculture)GeochemistryGeomorphologyOrganic chemistryGeotechnical engineeringChemistryLayer (electronics)Microbial Community Ecology and PhysiologyGroundwater and Isotope GeochemistryEnvironmental DNA in Biodiversity Studies
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