Can Groundwater Sustain The Future Development Of Rural Zimbabwe?

Zimbabwe occupies a tectonically stable plateau underlain by ancient Precambrian crystalline basement rocks. These  form a central craton bounded by east-west trending mobile belts; the Zambezi mobile belt to the north and the Limpopo mobile belt to the south. Zimbabwe receives generally low and variable quantities of seasonal rainfall within a semi-arid to savannah type climate characterised by moderate to high temperatures. Evaporation commonly exceeds rainfall so that recharge to the thin near surface aquifers is generally low and in some years non-existent. The groundwater resources of the weathered and fractured basement aquifers that underlie more than 60% of the country are of limited potential, typically sufficient to supply the needs of small villages and cattle ranches. However, within the central plateau area of the African to Post-African erosion surfaces, the weathered and fractured basement may exceed 60 m in thickness. The thickness of this zone diminishes towards the main valley systems where subsequent cycles of erosion have stripped the weathered zone away, leaving only a shallow surface fractured zone that may only be 20-30 m thick. Groundwater resources have been developed extensively in Zimbabwe since the 1920s. During 1991/92 drought abstraction from urban boreholes within the southern Harare area caused yield decline and ultimate failure of numerous boreholes. It is now time to question the long-term viability of groundwater development within the basement aquifers in Zimbabwe given the uncertainty in groundwater resources, the complexities of the climate–groundwater interactions and the projected demands of a growing rural population.

 

Presenter Name
Jeffery
Presenter Surname
Davies
Area
Zimbabwe
Conference year
2013