Preliminary Chemical Characterization of Waters in the Experimental Lakes Area, Northwestern Ontario

Abstract
Water analyses in 1968 and 1969 from 40 small lakes within a small area of the Canadian Shield in northwestern Ontario gave mean values for Ca, Na, Mg, and K of 1.6, 0.9, 0.9, and 0.4 mg/liter with Ca > Na > Mg > K on a molar basis. HCO3, SO4, and Cl (on a smaller number of samples) were 4.1, 3.0, and 1.4 mg/liter. Total CO2 was variable in the range 0.3–12.0 mg/liter. Specific conductance was in the range 10–35 μmho/cm at 25 C and pH 5.4–7.5. Color was < 5–150 Hazen units, and plant pigments (as chlorophyll a) < 1–21 μg/liter. Total dissolved nitrogen was in the range 110–300 mg N/liter and total dissolved phosphorus 3–20 μg P/liter. NO3-N and PO4-P were often undetectable in summer, and reached winter maxima around 100 and 10 μg/liter.Total dissolved nitrogen and phosphorus contents of five lakes were computed at the beginning and end of periods of several weeks during summer stagnation. Changes were negligibly small in three of the deeper lakes, but the two shallowest showed increases of 0.22 and 0.62 g N/m2 and 0.03 and 0.13 g P/m2. Analyses of precipitation and stream waters were used, with stream flow rates, to calculate input and output of nutrients from four of these lakes during the same periods. Retention of nutrients had occurred in all, and it was concluded that in the two deeper lakes nutrients had been lost to the sediments, whereas in the two shallower ones the increases in dissolved nutrients found were derived from the sediments.Analyses of 33 other Canadian Shield lake areas and of 13 other dilute lakes in other regions are tabulated. Comparison with the Experimental Lakes Area (ELA) lakes shows that the latter are more dilute than any in the Shield area except for some in the Northwest Territories, and much more dilute than any others in the world except for some alpine lakes in California.