Conference Abstracts

All Abstracts were presented at the Groundwater Conferences

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Abstract

Porosity describes the ratio between the volume of pores, cracks, and fissures and the total volume of a studied geological medium. This notion implies a volume averaging of the medium characteristics using the concept of Representative Elementary Volume (REV). Small volumes can contain only pores, while larger volumes typically contain both pores and fissures. Porosity can be highly scale-dependent, and different porosity values can be measured for the same geological formation. Furthermore, groundwater in the pores and cracks can be partly immobile or mobile. So, the porosity actively involved in groundwater flow can be discussed. A ‘mobile water porosity’ can be defined, but this remains highly dependent on the existing pressure conditions in the geological medium. In unconfined conditions, the term ‘effective porosity’ usually corresponds to the drainage porosity corresponding to the specific yield or storage coefficient. When dealing with solute transport and remediation of contaminated sites, another ‘effective porosity’ is needed to describe the advection velocity of the contaminant. This ‘mobile water porosity’ acting in solute transport processes typically takes lower values than drainage’s ‘effective porosity’. Scale issues must also be expected, as shown by field and lab tracer tests.

The term ‘Darcy velocity’ will be banished herein because it induces much confusion. For clarity, we propose to distinguish ‘drainage effective porosity’ and ‘transport effective porosity’. The physical meaning of both terms is discussed, and examples of supporting observations are presented for illustration and discussion.

Abstract

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people have inhabited the lands now known as Australia for over 65,000 years. Their communities are intricately connected to the land and waters through culture and tradition. However, there are few examples of integrated water resource management that serve Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities or cultural interests. This is particularly the case for groundwater. In Australia, Indigenous connections to groundwater have historically been overlooked or, in some cases, assumed not to exist. On the contrary, many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cultures have longstanding physical and spiritual connections to a range of artesian and subartesian groundwater resources. These cultures also house accurate records of groundwater systems.

Despite this, groundwater management in Australia remains dominated by Western scientific perspectives, and the groundwater sector poorly integrates Indigenous stakeholder concerns or knowledge into groundwater management and planning. IAH Australia has prepared and signed an Indigenous Groundwater Declaration intending to raise awareness among the groundwater community of the value of Indigenous perspectives and knowledge of groundwater systems. This Declaration can be viewed and signed at http://declaration.iah.org.au. This presentation provides examples of effective partnerships between Indigenous Communities and Government or Academic groundwater professionals. While progress has been made, challenges must be overcome to integrate Indigenous knowledge and connections into groundwater resource management.

Abstract

The drinking water health issues have been considered due to improved living standards in recent years. Finding and developing high-quality groundwater with high-level minerals has become key to improving human health. The hydrochemical test data of 66 springs in Zhaojue County were analyzed using various methods, and the spatial distributions of H2 SiO3 -rich groundwater, hydrogeochemical characteristics, formation conditions and genesis were revealed. The main results including: 1) the groundwater with H2 SiO3 (≥25mg / L) was identified as the low salinity and alkaline water, which distributed in the six areas with the basement rocks of basalt,with a distribution area of about 79 square kilometers. The H2 SiO3 concentration was generally 25.74~46.04 mg/L; the low mineralization characterized the H2 SiO3 -rich groundwater of study area while the main hydrochemical types of groundwater are HCO3 - Ca·Mg, HCO3 -Ca, and HCO3 -Na; the Pearson correlation coefficient between the content of H2 SiO3 in groundwater and the content of pH is relatively high, indicating that the level of H2 SiO3 in groundwater in the study area is significantly affected by the pH value of the solution; the H2 SiO3 -rich groundwater was influenced by the water-rock interactions, the distribution range and solubility of silicate minerals ,the development of surrounding rock fissures, and water conservation and recharge conditions in the county, among which the water-rock interactions play a critical role. The results can provide a basis for the development of mineral water industry and the construction of urban and rural high-quality water sources in Zhaojue County.

Abstract

Source protection area delineation has evolved over the last decades from fixed radius, analytical and numerical methods which do not consider uncertainty to more complex stochastic numerical approaches where uncertainties are often considered in a Monte Carlo framework. The representation of aquifer heterogeneity in these studies is typically based on a geostatistical representation of hydraulic properties. This presentation compares results from complex stochastic flow and transport simulations, simple homogeneous models, and existing analytical expressions. As a case study, we use the existing drinking supply wells in West Melton located Canterbury’s Selwyn District in New Zealand. Monte Carlo realisations are parameterised in MODFLOW6 so that the prior knowledge of the aquifer’s effective, large scale flow characteristics is honoured. Homogenous simulations are based on the same grid, using the aquifer’s effective properties to parameterise the numerical flow model. In both cases, conservative transport of pathogens is undertaken using Modpath7, using both forward and backward particle tracking. The numerical results are compared with analytical expressions from the international literature. Our results suggest that aquifer heterogeneity needs to be explicitly addressed in all cases. Homogeneous simulations almost certainly underestimate contamination risk and produce unrealistically small source protection areas. Parameterisation of the stochastic heterogeneous realisations also affects the size and extent of the source protection area, suggesting that these need to be carefully considered for practical applications.

Abstract

While traditional well and spring sampling are limited to the integration of point data and the interpolation of the data across large scales. Electrical measurements of aquifers can be extended across a range of scales and integrated to provide an improved quantitative understanding of groundwater systems. At a site in Oklahoma, USA, a karst-managed aquifer recharge research site is being used to test electrical techniques for aquifer characterization on the kilometer scale and monitoring the aquifer on the meter scale. At the kilometer scale, the data illustrate fault locations, siphons in flow paths, and previously uncharacterized conduits. At the metre scale, the monitoring data illustrate porosity structure, flow paths, and potential biological changes in the subsurface. The results indicate that electrical approaches can significantly change aquifer conceptual models and provide targeted sampling locations in karstic bedrock aquifers.

Abstract

Although methane occurrences have been documented in Karoo groundwater in the past, the advent of possible unconventional oil and gas extraction now made it important to determine the type and origin of this methane to assess the possibility of shallow-deep groundwater interaction. During groundwater surveys from 2016-2021, methane was detected at three sites in the Western Karoo: the Soekor sites KL1/65, QU1/65 and an unidentified shallow groundwater borehole (BHA). The Soekor wells were drilled in the 1960-1970s to depths of between 2500-3500 meters in South Africa’s search for oil. On the other hand, Borehole BHA was drilled in 1998 and only up to a depth of 298m. This study aimed to determine methane’s origin through gas and isotope analyses. To do this, groundwater, rock and soil samples were analysed to determine whether the methane is thermogenic or biogenic and its origin. We determined that methane was both thermogenic and biogenic and probably originated from different layers of the Karoo formations and that mixing occurs between deep and shallow aquifer systems at these Soekor sites. This information was used to develop a final conceptual model of what the Karoo underground system might look like and to make recommendations for establishing a groundwater baseline.

Abstract

Climate change is expected to have a significant impact on freshwater resources across the globe. Changes in the distribution and quantities of rainfall over the coming decade will impact various earth systems, such as vegetation, contributions to streamflow, sub-surface infiltration and recharge. While groundwater resources are expected to act as a buffer, changes in rainfall will ultimately impact the recharge process and, thus, groundwater reserves. Understanding these changes is a crucial step to adapt better and mitigate climate change’s impacts on water resources. This is valid in South Africa, where much of the population depends on groundwater as a freshwater supply. Hence, this research presents the status quo regarding climate change’s impacts on South Africa’s groundwater resources. Reviewing relevant literature, the impacts on recharge, groundwater quantity (storage changes), discharge and groundwater-surface water interactions, groundwater quality, and groundwater-dependent ecosystems are discussed. In addition, utilizing factors such as rainfall, slope and vegetation cover collected from CMIP6 climate projections, changes in groundwater recharge potential from the past through the present and future are demonstrated. The findings illustrate uncertainty over the long-term impacts of climate change on groundwater for different regions and various aquifers. However, global warming could lead to reduced recharge, which impacts groundwater reserves.

Abstract

Worldwide, more than 400 transboundary aquifers (TBAs) have been identified. Only a small number of these aquifers have been assessed in detail. Consequently, little is known about (potential) transboundary impacts. Changes in transboundary groundwater fluxes can indicate potential transboundary impacts as groundwater abstractions can affect such fluxes, indicating potential risks of transboundary contamination. To our knowledge, a quantitative assessment of transboundary aquifer fluxes (TBAFs) is not available because national groundwater models (if existing) often lack a good interaction with surrounding countries. In recent years, a high-resolution global groundwater model (GGM) has been developed as part of the PCR-GLOBWB family of models, having a 5 arcmin (~10*10km2 ) resolution. PCR-GLOBWB has previously been used to quantify environmental flows, assess global droughts, and assess climate impacts on global water resources. Recently the 5 arcmin GGM has been updated to 30 arcsec (~1*1km2 ) using high performance computing (referred to as GLOBGM). We present an application of GLOBGM to assess TBAFs of major TBAs. Results show that even though hydrogeological data are often scarce, a rough order of magnitude of the TBAFs can be assessed. TBA fluxes are compared with groundwater recharge. Although GLOBGM cannot replace assessments of TBAs based on local hydrogeological information and information on groundwater use, the analysis provides valuable information. GLOBGM can be used to quantify the relevance of TBAFs in relation to other fluxes such as from rivers or (future) abstractions. TBAF analyses can also assist in prioritising scarce funds and capacity between TBAs

Abstract

In this study, we assess the potential of large riverbed aquifers in semi-arid Africa, known as sand rivers, to mitigate water scarcity and salinity for multiple-use water supply through a case study of the Limpopo River in Mozambique. Such sand river systems are widespread and still heavily underused at a regional scale, particularly in Mozambique, with the riparian vegetation currently being the primary user, though only consuming a minor fraction of available water. At a local scale, we performed geoelectrical surveys, water level measurements (in river and groundwater), as well as field physicochemical measurements and hydrochemical and isotopic sampling at 38 locations in the river channel, margins and up to 6 km away from the river, over five years. Results show that these shallow systems can be up to a kilometer wide and 15 m thick and, at some locations, can extend laterally beyond the river channel, below thin layers of clay and silt. Large areas of the sand river channel carry runoff yearly, providing optimal conditions for rapid recharge into the coarse sands with a high storage capacity. Connectivity between the river margin and channel is clearly shown at the local scale, even though sand pockets located further away appear isolated (revealed by geophysics), isotopically different and more brackish. Recharge, evapotranspiration and mixing processes are confirmed through hydrogeochemical modelling. The proven connectivity is highly relevant as groundwater is abstracted locally, promoting socio-economic development in water-scarce regions.

Abstract

Recharge is an important factor in Water Resources Management as it is often used as a measure for sustainable groundwater abstraction and resource allocation. The recharge estimation is, however, linked to a specific time, area and conditions and then generalised over seasons and years. Current climate change estimations predict a warmer and drier future for western parts of southern Africa. Groundwater recharge estimation methods do not consider changes in climate over the short term and do not consider the longer trends of a changing climate. This article looks at the various methodologies used in recharge estimations and their application in a changing world, where rainfall period, pattern and intensity have changed, where higher temperatures lead to higher actual evapotranspiration and where there is a greater need for water resources for use in agriculture, industry and domestic use. Our study considers the implications of current recharge estimation methods over the long term for water allocation and water resources management of groundwater resources from local and aquifer catchment scale estimations.

Abstract

Identifying groundwater recharge and discharge areas across catchments is critical for implementing effective strategies for salinity mitigation, surface water and groundwater resource management, and ecosystem protection. This study seeks to identify potential GW-SW discharge and recharge areas around the Barotse Floodplain. The results of remote sensing analysis using the Normalised Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) show that the vegetation is sensitive to the dynamics of groundwater level, with shallower levels (< 10 m) in the lower reaches compared to deeper levels (>10 m) in the upper catchment). These zones are further investigated and likely represent geological variability, aquifer confinement and the degree of GW-SW interactions. GW-SW interactions likely are influenced by an interplay of factors such as water levels in the groundwater and surface level and hydrogeological conditions. Based on the findings, the wetland hosts riparian vegetation species responsive to the groundwater dynamic. NDVI can thus be used as a proxy to infer groundwater in the catchment. Therefore, effective water resources management of the floodplain should be implemented through conjunctive management of groundwater and surface water.

Abstract

Huixian Karst National Wetland Park is the most typical karst wetland in the middle and low latitudes of the world and has become an internationally important wetland. The relationship between water quality and aquatic organisms in Huixian Wetland is a hot research topic in wetland ecology. This article focuses on the relationship between the current water quality situation in Guilin Huixian Karst Wetland and the growth of wetland plants. Sixteen sampling points are set up in the wetland to monitor and analyze water quality in wet, normal, and dry seasons. The Kriging index interpolation method is used to obtain a comprehensive water quality interpolation map in the survey area during normal water periods and in combination with the wetland plant survey sample data and the landscape status. A comprehensive analysis of the relationship between wetland plant growth and water quality. The results show that the centre of Huixian Wetland receives recharge from surrounding groundwater, which is greatly affected by the surrounding water quality. The comprehensive water quality is relatively good in the dry season, relatively poor in the normal season, and the worst in the wet season. Agricultural production, non-point source pollution, rural domestic sewage, and human interference affect wetland water quality, which directly affects the structure and function of plant communities and the ecological service function of wetlands.

Abstract

In 2021-23, northern Italy suffered a severe drought due to the absence of rainfall, which strongly affected the pre-alpine lake levels, affecting energy production, agriculture and sustainable river flows. This led to harsh consequences on agriculture, which in the Lombardy region almost completely relied on flooding irrigation methods using water from lakes through Ticino and Adda rivers. As part of the INTERREG Central- Europe project “MAURICE”, which focuses on Integrated Water Resources Management, the winter irrigation practice is proposed as a climate change adaptation strategy. The main project idea is to store surface water in aquifers in periods of exceedance (autumn/winter) using the very dense channels irrigation network as a “natural” infiltration system. The underground storage would increase the groundwater levels, bringing two main advantages during the spring/summer seasons: a good flow rate at plain springs and, in periods of water scarcity, the possibility to extract groundwater for agricultural purposes. Relying on the slow groundwater velocity (about 350 m/y), this practice keeps water stored in the subsoil just below the irrigated areas where the water is needed.

In the early project stage, a basin-scale numerical model is presented to test the potentiality of such practice. A specified water volume was distributed on the crop fields during the winter period, and the effects of such managed recharge were evaluated, also considering the possible problems deriving from the groundwater levels increase. The model demonstrates the adaptation measure feasibility, which will be tested at a field scale in a Pilot Area.

Abstract

Since the end of the 1970’s, the Ministry of Agriculture, Water and Land Reform (MAWLR), through the development of the groundwater database (GROWAS II), gathered a great number of data on groundwater quality. In an ongoing study (MAWLR-MEFT-AFD-BRGM, 2023), an opportunity was presented to compile chemical data for groundwater in the two most north-western regions of Namibia, Kunene and Omusati, to elaborate and support decision-making with the available information. A selection of 3256 data presenting a good ionic balance (± 10%) was selected from a large dataset, using metadata from previous BGR projects and the Geological Survey of Namibia at a 1:250,000 scale as supporting information. During the assessment of chemical data, it was depicted that most of the good quality water for human consumption and irrigation is located in the carbonated sedimentary formations at the southeastern part of Kunene and a great part of the northern part of the Kunene region. With more detailed data treatment, it allowed for confirming a natural origin for high fluoride concentration linked to granite, gneiss, old volcanic rocks and high sulphate concentration due to evaporates (gypscrete) in the eastern part of Omusati. In contrast, high nitrate concentrations were found in various lithologies across the two regions confirming local anthropogenic contamination. These results were compared to information obtained through the few published works of local studies to evaluate the accuracy of this large-scale assessment of chemical data.

Abstract

The beneficial groundwater use in the Southern African Development Community (SADC) is well documented. Groundwater plays a vital role in the freshwater supply mix and, in some cases, is the only source of freshwater, especially in the arid region of SADC. However, the management of this resource is hampered by numerous challenges, such as lack of data, limited tools to leverage available data, lack of resources, institutional mismanagement, and climate change, amongst others. Of these challenges, the lack of data and the tools needed to transform this data into information has consequences for the decision-making process. Hence, this research attempts to address this challenge by demonstrating the use of big data and artificial intelligence (AI) to fill data gaps with new unconventional sources and model groundwater processes to transform data into actionable information. The presentation focuses on introducing the landscape of groundwater big data in SADC, followed by a review of regional AI applications. After that, novel approaches to using AI in various aquifers across SADC are demonstrated in their applicability to support groundwater management. Finally, the challenges facing the use of AI in SADC are discussed, followed by opportunities for new research based on the current state-of-the-art AI techniques. The results illustrate that AI can be a helpful tool for supporting groundwater management in SADC. However, the need for enhanced data collection is evident for these techniques to be generally applicable.

Abstract

To explore the sources of pollution and health risk profile of heavy metal elements in groundwater,41 sets of representative groundwater samples from the southwest subbasin of the Shiqi River were examined for 10 heavy metal elements, correlation analysis and principal component analysis were used to resolve the possible sources of heavy metal contamination in groundwater. The concentration characteristics and health risk levels of the 10 heavy metals were assessed using the single factor contamination index (Pi), the Nemerow comprehensive contamination index (PN) and the health risk model. The results show that: 1) The average values of heavy metal elements of the groundwater in the study area all met the limit of class III water standard in the quality standard for groundwater; only the maximum value of Al was exceeded, followed by a large variation in the concentrations of Al, Mn and Cr. The heavy metal element with the largest average contribution was Al (65.74%). 2) The results of the single factor contamination index evaluation show that only the heavy metal element Al exceeds the level, and the results of the Nemerow comprehensive contamination index evaluation show that the study area is basically at low pollution levels and the quality of groundwater is good. 3) The results of the multivariate statistical analysis show that Zn, Co and Mn are mixed sources of geological formation and domestic waste, Al, As, and Cu are agricultural sources, Cd, Cr and Ni are industrial sources, and Hg comes from long-range atmospheric transport.

Abstract

Diverse tools exist to study the transfer of contamination from its source to groundwater and related springs. A backward approach, i.e. sampling spring water to determine the origin of contamination, is more complex and requires multiple information. Microbial source tracking (MST) using host-specific markers is one of the tools, which, however, has shown to be insufficient as a stand-alone method, particularly in karst groundwater catchments. A karst spring in the Swiss Jura Mountains was studied concerning the occurrence and correlation of a set of faecal indicators, including classical parameters and bacteroidal markers. Sporadic monitoring proved the impact on spring water quality, mainly during high water stages. Additional event-focused sampling evidenced a more detailed and divergent pattern of individual indicators. A multiple-tool approach, complementing faecal indicator monitoring with artificial tracer experiments and measuring natural tracers, could specify the origin of ruminant and human faecal contaminations. Natural tracers allowed for distinguishing between water components from the saturated zone, the soil/epikarst storage, or freshly infiltrated rainwater. Additionally, the breakthrough of injected dye tracers and their remobilization during subsequent recharge events were correlated with the occurrence of faecal markers. The findings hypothesize that human faecal contamination is related to septic tanks overflowing at moderate rainfall intensities. Linkage with vulnerability assessment and land-use information can finally better locate the potential point sources. Such a toolbox provides useful basics for groundwater protection and catchment management and insight into general processes governing the fate and transport of faecal contaminants in karst environments.

Abstract

Test-pumping drawdown curves do not always sufficiently indicate aquifer characteristics and geometry and should never be analysed in isolation. Using derivative analysis and flow dimension theory, inferring the regional geometries and flow characteristics of fractured aquifers that are otherwise unknown or inconclusive is possible. As the drawdown and/or pressure front propagates through the aquifer, it reaches various hydrogeological objects that influence flow regimes and imprints a sequence of signatures in the drawdown derivative curve. The conjunctive interpretation of these flow regime sequences and hydrogeological data results in a robust, well-informed conceptual model (in terms of both local groundwater flow and the aquifer), which is vital for sustainable groundwater resource management. Derivative and flow regime analysis was applied to the test-pumping data of confined and unconfined Nardouw Aquifer (Table Mountain Group) boreholes within Steenbras Wellfield (Western Cape). Major NE-SW trending folding and transtensional Steenbras-Brandvlei Megafault Zone, in association with cross-cutting faults/fractures and younger False Bay Suite dykes, make the Nardouw Aquifer (and deeper Peninsula Aquifer) hydrogeologically complex. The sequential flow regime analyses reveal domains of conceptual flow models, including open vertical fractures, T-shaped channels, double (triple) porosity models, and leaky/recharge boundary models, amongst others. Appropriate analytical flow models (type curve fitting) are then applied for accurate aquifer parameter estimations, which are used to evaluate recommended long-term yields through predictive pumping scenarios. The outcome is an improved hydrogeological understanding and enhanced conceptual model of the aquifer, which informs numerical modelling, ecological protection, and groundwater resource management.

Abstract

South Africa faces serious water scarcity challenges not only because it is a semi-arid country but also due to climate change. One of the most significant effects of climate change is an increase in temperature, which inevitably increases evaporation. Increased evaporation directly reduces the availability of surface water resources. Groundwater is less susceptible than surface water resources to evaporation and thus offers resilience against the impacts of climate change. Many South African cities, communities, and farmers depend on groundwater for domestic or other socio-economic purposes. This implies that groundwater resources which are currently or potentially utilisable should be identified, and suitable legal measures should be implemented to protect these resources from potential risks of harm or damage posed by anthropogenic activity. First, This article evaluates the effectiveness of the country’s existing regulatory framework to effectively protect South Africa’s groundwater resources and finds that the framework can be improved significantly. Secondly, it explores regulatory opportunities within the existing legal framework to strengthen South Africa’s groundwater governance regime, including using land use planning instruments to facilitate the implementation of groundwater protection zones

Abstract

Managed Aquifer Recharge (MAR) provides an integrated water governance solution that improves water security for communities and farmers by storing water in aquifers and managing groundwater extractions to ensure water supplies are available during droughts. Quantitative analysis of levelised costs and benefit-cost ratios (BCRs) of 21 MAR schemes from 15 countries and qualitative assessment of additional social and environmental benefits demonstrates the benefits of MAR compared to water supply alternatives. Cost-benefit analysis provides a systematic method for comparing alternative water infrastructure options. Levelised cost is a widely accepted method of comparing MAR with alternative water infrastructure solutions when market valuations of water are unavailable.

The benefits of MAR can be estimated by the cost of the cheapest alternative source of supply or the production value using water recovered from aquifer storage. MAR schemes recharging aquifers with natural water using infiltration basins or riverbank filtration are relatively cheap with high BCRs. Schemes using recycled water and/or requiring wells with substantial drilling infrastructure and or water treatment are more expensive while offering positive BCRs. Most MAR schemes have positive or neutral effects on aquifer conditions, water levels, water quality, and environmental flows. Energy requirements are competitive with alternative sources of supply. This analysis demonstrates strong returns to investment in the reported MAR schemes. MAR provides valuable social and environmental benefits and contributes to sustaining groundwater resources where extraction is managed.

Abstract

Year-round water security is at risk as socio-economic developments lead to increasing water demands, while climate change affects water availability through higher-intensity rainfall and prolonged periods of drought. Coastal zones and deltas with often high population densities experience additional risks of salinisation and land subsidence. These developments ask for creative solutions to secure sustainable and year-round access to fresh water. The subsurface provides storage capacity to actively infiltrate freshwater, bridging the time-gap between demand and supply. Combining infiltration with extraction and desalination of brackish water prevents the salinisation of aquifers whilst providing an additional water source. We call this COASTAR. A Dutch research consortium with partners like water companies and water boards develops COASTAR. Among COASTAR results are suitability maps for Aquifer Storage and Recovery (ASR) and Brackish Water Extraction (BWE) in the coastal zone of the Netherlands. The maps are based on geohydrological factors. A quick-scan analysis was also performed to quantify the nation-wide potential extractable ASR and BWE volumes. COASTAR develops case study models and local scale pilots on ASR and BWE. For two water supply regions, an analysis has been made to geographically match development in water demand with suitability for ASR and BWE as a step in the search for strategic locations to develop ASR and BWE. The suitability maps provide guidance for initiatives’ development and practical experiences from pilot projects; this provides important information for further upscaling of COASTAR approaches.

Abstract

The serpentinization of ultramafic rocks is a process in which minerals of ferromagnesian nature (e.g., olivine) are transformed into serpentine and produce groundwater with a very high pH. In these settings, CH4 can be produced by combining H2 from serpentinization and CO2 from the atmosphere, soil, carbon-bearing rocks, or mantle, although the microbial generation of CH4, mediated by methanogens utilizing CO2, formate and/or acetate can be another source in these aquifers. In this sense, the hydrochemistry of hyperalkaline springs can provide valuable information about gas origin. The Ronda peridotites (Malaga province, Spain) are one of the world’s largest outcrops of the subcontinental mantle (~450 km2). Hyperalkaline springs (pH>10) emerging along faults present a permanent low outflow (<1 L/s), Ca2+- OH- facies and residence times exceeding 2,000 years. The fluids, poor in Mg2+ and rich in K+, Na+, Ca2+ and Cl-, also contain significant concentrations of dissolved CH4 and other hydrocarbons. Water samples have been collected from eight hyperalkaline springs and analyzed for major, minor and trace elements, including Platinum Group Elements (PGE) and Total Organic Carbon (TOC). The most mobile PGEs (Pd and Rh) are present in all the springs, indicating the existence of potential catalysts for the abiotic synthesis of CH4. High TOC concentrations are observed in some studied springs where previous analyses (i.e., bulk CH4 isotopes) have indicated a microbial CH4 origin.

Abstract

Basin-scale studies addressing the transfer of pollutants among groundwater and surface water bodies are essential to support local authorities in the sustainable management of freshwater resources. This work revealed that, in the hydro-system of the Oglio River basin (Northern Italy), nitrate pollution in groundwater, originated by overfertilization, is transferred downstream to surface water bodies via outflow through lowland springs and baseflow to gaining rivers. Downstream groundwater is unaffected due to reducing conditions that facilitate denitrification. It follows that efficient measures to reduce nitrate pollution in surface water bodies should not be applied solely to rivers/streams but, instead, they should include the upstream groundwater body. The work aimed at understanding nitrate pollution dynamics in an intensively irrigated hydro-system, focusing on the role played by the complex interaction among irrigation water, surface water and groundwater. The study relied on nitrate concentration, Cl/Br ratio, stable isotopic composition of water, nitrate and boron in groundwater, river, lake, spring, and rainwater samples. Results highlighted a well-defined spatial distribution of nitrate concentrations in groundwater, mainly driven by irrigation practices: (1) where groundwater-fed irrigation is done, return flow promotes high nitrate concentrations (>50 mg/L) due to groundwater recirculation; (2) where intensive surface-water-irrigation is practised, fed by low-nitrate river water, return flow generates lower nitrate concentrations (<50 mg/L) due to dilution. This work highlighted the importance of a holistic approach jointly investigating surface water, groundwater, and irrigation water when nitrate pollution is examined at a basin scale.

Abstract

The response of an alluvial and estuarine deposit aquifer, locally known as the Harbour Beds Formation, located in the coastal area of the Durban Metropolitan District to 48 hours of group well pumping is studied to understand its potential for groundwater supply and consequent seawater intrusion. Groundwater levels were monitored from the three pumped boreholes and piezometers. Similarly, EC, TDS and pH were monitored every hour from the boreholes and piezometers. Hydrochemical and water isotopes (2H and 18O) samples of groundwater were taken at 12, 18, 24, 36, 42 and 48 hours during pumping. The results indicate that the aquifer has a transmissivity, hydraulic conductivity and storativity of 48.97 m2/d, 1.7 m/day and 0.0032, respectively. The generally monitored EC, TDS, and pH have been fairly constant during the pumping period and didn’t show any seawater intrusion. Similarly, the hydrochemical data monitored for the three boreholes show general Na-CaHCO3-Cl-dominated groundwater throughout the pumping duration. However, uneven drawdown distribution and complex groundwater flow conditions indicate that the aquifer structure and hydraulic properties are heterogeneous. The water isotopes (2H and 18O) monitoring during the test pumping suggests spatial variability regarding water recharging the Harbour Beds aquifer. Though limited in area extent, the Harbour Beds Formation aquifer is a productive aquifer with acceptable water quality and can be a viable water source for domestic and industrial uses. However, continuous long-term monitoring of water quality and groundwater levels using data loggers is recommended to prevent induced seawater intrusion and contamination.

Abstract

To better understand the role of groundwater contribution to baseflow and EWR in groundwater protection and allocation, groundwater contribution must be quantified. Groundwater contribution to baseflow remains a challenge. Baseflow values have been widely used as groundwater contribution to surface water, which overestimates or underestimates the role of groundwater in the ecological ecosystem sustainability. To achieve the aim of the study, which was to estimate groundwater contribution to baseflow in a perennial river system at a catchment scale of the Upper Berg catchment, three objectives were taken into consideration: 1) To describe the hydrogeology of river morphology for groundwater-surface water interaction, 2) To estimate groundwater contribution to baseflow 3) To demonstrate the use of the background condition in setting resource quality objectives. Baseflow separation method using the Lynne & Hollick and Chapman algorithms, mass balance equation using EC as the tracer, field observation, and hydrochemical analysis methods were used to determine groundwater contribution to baseflow. Based on the hydrogeological cross-section presented, the fractures and faults of the peninsula geological formation dominating the study area predicted groundwater contribution to baseflow, which was confirmed by the calculations. The mass balance equation showed that 2,397 % of the 7.9 % baseflow index calculated at G1H076 and 19,093% of the 7.2% baseflow index calculated at G1H077 was groundwater. The background condition of the Upper Berg catchment was determined to be pristine with clean water.

Abstract

The abstract presents a 2D modelling approach alternative to a 3D variable saturated groundwater model of solute or heat transport at the regional scale. We use FEFLOW to represent processes in the saturated zone, coupled with various models describing the unsaturated zone. The choice of the latter depends on modelling needs, i.e. simulation of the movement of seepage water and nitrate fate with respect to crop rotation patterns and dynamic characteristics of heat gradients, respectively. The flexibility of coupling specialized models of different subsurface compartments provides the opportunity to investigate the effects of land use changes on groundwater characteristics, considering the relevant drivers in sufficient detail, which is important in regions with intensive anthropogenic activities. The coupling can be operated either with (direct coupling) or without (sequential coupling) including the feedback between the saturated and the unsaturated zones depending on the depth of the groundwater table below the surface. Thus, the approach allows for reasonable computational times. The Westliches Leibnitzer Feld aquifer in Austria (43 km²; Klammler et al., 2013; Rock and Kupfersberger, 2018) will be presented as an example highlighting the needed input data, the modelling workflow and the validation against measurements.

Abstract

Salinization is one of the main threats to groundwater quality worldwide, affecting water security, crop productivity and biodiversity. The Horn of Africa, including eastern Ethiopia, northeast Kenya, Eritrea, Djibouti, and Somalia, has natural characteristics favouring high groundwater salinity. However, available salinity data are widely scattered, lacking a comprehensive overview of this hazard. To fill this gap, machine learning modelling was used to spatially predict patterns of high salinity with a dataset of 6300 groundwater quality measurements and various environmental predictors. Maps of groundwater salinity were produced for thresholds of 800, 1500 and 2500 μS/cm. The main drivers include precipitation, groundwater recharge, evaporation, ocean proximity, and fractured rocks. The combined overall model accuracy and area under the curve of multiple runs were both ~81%. The salinity maps highlight the uneven spatial distribution of salinity, with the affected areas mainly located in arid, flat lowlands.

These novel and high-resolution hazard maps (1 km2 resolution) further enable estimating the population potentially exposed to hazardous salinity levels. This analysis shows that about 11.5 million people (~7% of the total population) living in high-salinity areas, including 400,000 infants and half a million pregnant women, rely on groundwater for drinking. Somalia is the most affected country, with an estimated 5 million people potentially exposed. The created hazard maps are valuable decision-support tools for government agencies and water resource managers in helping direct salinity mitigation efforts

Abstract

Groundwater governance and risk management in the Murray-Darling Basin in Australia (MDB) are being challenged by the increasing demand for water and the growing scarcity and variability of water supply owing to climate change. Over the past 20 years, consideration of risk related to groundwater in the MDB has evolved from concerns about the impact of groundwater extraction on surface water resources to an integrated assessment of risks to connected water resources and ecosystems. The Basin Plan includes a comprehensive framework for assessing risks to Basin water resources and ecosystems, but further scientific and policy developments are required to implement the plan. Consistent definition and improved assessment of groundwater-surface water connectivity are required, together with longer planning timeframes. Multi-year planning rules and policies must be developed to exploit opportunities for integrated management of groundwater and surface water resources and storage to manage droughts and floods. Risks to groundwater quality and groundwater-dependent ecosystems must be adequately assessed and monitored to avoid adverse impacts on communities and long-term loss of ecosystem services. Further improvements can be made in assessing cumulative risks from coal seam gas and coal mining. Additional research can be targeted towards knowledge gaps and uncertainties that pose the greatest risk to connected groundwater and surface water resources and ecosystem viability. Most importantly, further training and capacity building in water management agencies is critical to enable effective and transparent monitoring and management of Basin water resources.

Abstract

Two numerical simulations using Feflow® software were conducted to demonstrate the utility of geophysical data to accurately determine groundwater levels and provide additional data to the groundwater modelling community to improve the model’s accuracy. One simulation is based on regional piezometric data, and the other uses geophysical data acquired through transient electromagnetic (TEM), electrical resistivity (ERT), and ground-penetrating radar (GPR) surveys. After both numerical analyses, the root mean square errors (RMS) obtained from the piezometric data and the multiple geophysical techniques to confirm the correlation between observed and simulated water levels were similar at 3.81 m and 2.76 m, respectively. Through a discrete modelling approach, this study shows that groundwater levels estimated using geophysical tools and methods and those determined by direct observation are comparable. In addition, before the 3D numerical flow model, a 3D geological model was built to fully represent this highly complex, heterogeneous, and anisotropic hydrological environment of the Saint-Narcisse moraine glacial deposits in eastern Mauricie, Québec. This stratigraphic reconstruction with Leapfrog software was necessary to provide a more detailed and realistic representation of this complex aquifer system. This study illustrates how geophysical data can complement direct observations to provide additional hydraulic information to hydrologic modellers. Geophysical surveys provide an extensive set of soft data that can be leveraged to improve groundwater flow models and determine water-table heights, particularly in areas characterized by limited direct piezometric information.

Abstract

The Anglo-American Municipal Capability & Partnership Program (MCPP) has partnered with the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) to implement programs focused on Strategic Water Management and Strategic Planning within the Gamagara and Tsantsabane Local municipalities within the Northern Cape Region. The CSIR appointed GEOSS South Africa (Pty) Ltd to assist with Municipal Groundwater Capacity Development and Support for these two municipalities. This work explores multi-level groundwater governance systems between the local municipality, government, the mining industry, and the private groundwater sector. The scope of the work focused on developing a comprehensive and practical groundwater management plan detailing the standard operating procedures for each municipality. These operating procedures have been drawn up using principles of best practice guidelines for groundwater monitoring and management but have taken site-specific details of the groundwater supply to the respective Municipalities into account. Workshops were conducted where Municipal staff were trained in basic principles pertaining to groundwater and practical skills in monitoring and managing their supply. This has proved very successful in informing Municipalities about their local groundwater system and aquifer. The capacity-building development aspect will ensure that Municipalities have the resources and the knowledge to manage their groundwater resource effectively. GEOSS has undergone several training workshops and offers weekly technical support to the two Municipalities. As the confidence of the municipal staff to manage their resource grows, their independence from the mining companies should lessen.

Abstract

In the past decade, Southern Africa has experienced periods of extreme drought. This was especially true in the western Karoo in South Africa. Continuous drought and limited rainfall led to declining aquifer water levels that curtailed sustainable water supply for towns and livestock. The western Karoo is almost completely dependent on groundwater. Managed aquifer recharge (MAR) is being used to reduce the effects of droughts and mitigate climate change impacts. A good understanding of the geology and the behaviour of the aquifers is needed for implementing various MAR designs, including nature-based solutions, which are used to recharge aquifers with limited rainfall. This paper discusses 5 active MAR case studies in the Western Karoo. Here, site-specific MAR methods that use small rainfall events deliver reasonable results, whereas the implemented MAR options keep most aquifers functional. Observations at the MAR sites also showed improved water quality and less bacterial clogging. This improves the environment around the managed aquifer recharge sites. The MAR methods and designs discussed in this paper can be used on a larger scale for a town or a smaller scale for a farm. Maintenance costs are low, which makes these options cost-effective for less wealthy areas.

Abstract

Groundwater is increasingly being exploited in South African cities as a drought crisis response, yet there is poorly coordinated regulation of increasing urban users and usage and fragmented management of aquifers. Designing interventions and innovations that ensure sustainable management of these resources requires systems thinking, where the city is understood as an integrated, interdependent set of actors and flows of water. This paper presents a study that applied and integrated an urban water metabolism (UWM) analysis with a governance network analysis for two major South African cities facing severe drought risk, Cape Town and Nelson Mandela Bay. ‘Learning Laboratories’ in each city brought together stakeholders from various groundwater-related domains to build a shared understanding of how groundwater fits into the larger system and how various actors shape urban groundwater flows and the health of local aquifers. The UWM quantified all hydrological and anthropogenic flows into and out of each city (or urban system) to conduct an integrated mass balance. How this mass balance changes under varying climate change scenarios and land use was used as a focal point of stakeholder discussions. The governance network analysis highlighted that many state and non-state actors have a stake in shaping the quantity and quality of urban groundwater, such as regulators, service providers, water users, knowledge providers, investors in infrastructure, and emergency responders.

Abstract

Groundwater resources in Africa face increasing threats of over-exploitation and pollution due to urbanization, agricultural and mining activities, yet monitoring remains challenging. Conventional approaches to monitoring groundwater at the exclusion of communities have not been successful. To overcome this, it is important to fully engage and train local communities in monitoring Groundwater Levels (GWLs), Rainfall and Water Quality (RWQ), which are important for understanding groundwater dynamics in wellfields. In this way, villagers can better understand groundwater issues and convey this information to others to cooperatively manage groundwater. A pilot program to monitor GWLs and RWQ by locals was initiated in two villages each in Botswana and Uganda to learn about its effectiveness. Through continuous stakeholder engagement, the local communities in the two case studies have been facilitated, trained and supported in monitoring groundwater and using the information collected to understand groundwater trends and their sustainability. Preliminary results indicate improvement in understanding the importance of groundwater monitoring by the communities and the implications on groundwater sustainability for improved livelihoods. This has become useful to one of the communities engaged in a village-level irrigation project which depends on groundwater resources. This project builds on a successful village-level participatory approach developed in the MARVI project (www.marvi.org.in ). It seeks to contribute to the United Nation’s 2022 call on “Groundwater: making the invisible visible” to highlight the importance of better monitoring and managing this vital resource.

Abstract

Water and contaminant transport processes in the vadose zone through preferential flow paths can be understood using environmental and artificial tracer methods. Further improvement in tracer techniques can be achieved by applying numerical modelling techniques of both water and solute transport, accounting for additional information on water movement and the matric potential of the vadose zone. The vadose zone is often ignored as a key component linking the land surface to the groundwater table, even though it acts as a filter that removes or stores potential contaminants. The water transit time between the surface and the groundwater table is frequently investigated using artificial tracers that normally show conservative behaviour. The main advantage is that the input function can be clearly defined, even though artificial tracers can generally only be applied over a relatively small area. The research is expected to provide insight into the selection and use of environmental and artificial tracers as markers for detecting and understanding the contaminant transport processes and pathways of contaminants in altered vadose zone environments (open-pit quarry). The impact is improved characterisation of the pathways, transport and migration processes of contaminants, and residence times, leading to the development of appropriate conceptual and numerical models of vadose zone flow processes that consider various contaminant sources. The principal aim is, therefore, to systematically examine the transport mechanisms and associated pathways of different environmental and artificial tracers in an open-pit quarry.

Abstract

An approach for evaluating the sustainability of managed aquifer recharge (MAR) has been developed and applied in Botswana. Numerical groundwater modelling, water supply security modelling (SWWM) and multi-criteria decision analysis (MCDA) are combined to thoroughly assess hydrogeological conditions, supply and demand over time and identify the most sustainable options. Botswana is experiencing water stress due to natural conditions, climate change and increasing water demand. MAR has been identified as a potential solution to increase water supply security, and the Palla Road aquifer, located 150 km northeast of the capital, Gaborone, has been identified as a potential site. To evaluate the potential of MAR and if it is suitable for improving water supply security, three full-scale MAR scenarios were evaluated based on their technical, economic, social and environmental performance relative to a scenario without MAR. The numerical groundwater model and the WSSM were used iteratively to provide necessary input data. The WSSM is a probabilistic and dynamic water balance model used to simulate the magnitude and probability of water shortages based on source water availability, dynamic storage in dams and aquifers, reliability of infrastructure components, and water demand. The modelling results were used as input to the MCDA to determine the sustainability of alternative MAR scenarios. The results provide useful decision support and show that MAR can increase water supply security. For the Palla Road aquifer, storage and recovery with a capacity of 40 000 m3 /d is the most sustainable option.

Abstract

The Limpopo River Basin (LRB) is highly vulnerable to recurrent floods and droughts, significantly threatening its water and food security. Sustainable groundwater management is necessary to improve resilience. Scientists and stakeholders must collaborate to evaluate management scenarios that can identify sustainable practices. A transboundary basin-scale management instrument was developed using a multisector collaborative modelling approach to identify the role of groundwater in building resilience. The approach used an integrated hydro(geo)logical model, co-created through stakeholder workshops. The model assessed management scenarios identified during a series of local, national and transboundary stakeholders workshops, focusing on improving groundwater storage during wet periods for use during dry periods in a context of population growth and increasing groundwater reliance across the basin. Management scenarios: (1) increasing groundwater abstraction; (2) deforestation; (3) afforestation; and (4) managed aquifer recharge (MAR) using injection wells capturing excess water from major dams, rainwater harvesting through local ponds/ wells, and small water reservoirs. Analysis of scenario outputs suggested that local groundwater storage techniques, especially water harvesting and storage through small-scale water well recharge, were the most effective strategy in reducing the risk and impact of floods and drought at the basin scale. Upscaling this strategy can significantly increase groundwater levels across the basin, supporting increasing groundwater reliance. The study showed that the multisector collaborative modelling approach effectively co-creates management strategies and identifies appropriate and inclusive strategies to improve resilience in data-limiting conditions. The proposed modelling outcomes are useful in making informed decisions regarding water management and transboundary cooperation in the LRB.

Abstract

The occurrence of emerging organic contaminants (EOCs) in the aquatic environment is of no surprise since these are applied for various purposes daily. This study investigated the changes in EOCs concentrations in the water between 2019 and 2020. During rainy seasons, samples were collected from dams and surrounding boreholes in the Eastern Basin of the Witwatersrand Goldfields. During the first and second laboratory analyses, 24 and 11 analytes were screened in the water samples. The findings indicated that in 2020, compounds such as caffeine, sulfamethoxazole, atrazine and metolachlor displayed detection frequency exceeding 2019. This indicates that the occurrence of these compounds in the aquatic system has increased within a year. Whilst carbamazepine was still traced in 12 sites as previously observed in 2019, compounds estradiol, estrone, bisphenol A and ibuprofen were traced in fewer sites than they were detected in 2019. Compounds 4-nonylphenol, methylparaben, caffeine and atrazine were detected in all the samples analysed for 2019 and 2020, respectively. Antiretrovirals (ARVs) were analysed once and were detected in most sites, with efavirenz registering the highest (12/18) detection frequency. Assessing the occurrence of EOCs in boreholes according to the depth indicated that bisphenol A and estrone were traced in greater concentrations in deep than shallow aquifers, whilst the opposite was observed for atrazine. This study showed groundwater susceptibility to contamination by EOCs, with concentrations of most compounds increasing with time due to their high usage and improper sewer systems in the area.

Abstract

Hydrogeology and hydrology are commonly overlooked aspects of geoheritage, despite strong geological links. Water in all its forms has played a critical role in the development of Earth, and the shaping of its landforms (in addition to sustaining all life on the planet), and access to water has been the core reason for the establishment of numerous human settlements. The evolution of a settlement’s water supply tracks its development history across the Holocene, providing an excellent tool for teaching the public about human interactions with the Earth and our shared future going forward in a changing climate. To this extent, two self-guided trails (with associated guidebooks and mobile apps) have been developed in areas of the Western Cape province of South Africa with rich water supply histories and hydro-geoheritage – the Table Mountain Dams Trail in Cape Town and the Hermanus Water Walk in the Overberg region. The surface and groundwater supply systems that both trails cover have an inherently unique link with the Ordovician-Devonian Table Mountain Group fractured aquifer systems (including the complex tectonic and geomorphic evolutionary history that has led to the present landscapes), which most residents and international visitors are generally unaware of (despite being major tourist regions in South Africa). It is envisioned that through these guides/trails, the reader/walker will gain a better understanding of/appreciation for the value of water, a greater feeling of ownership for the natural history of the city/region they reside in, and will strive to preserve associated hydro-geoheritage for future generations.

Abstract

The aquifers in the Chao Phraya River basin region were abundant in groundwater. Lately, the groundwater level has been declining due to agricultural activities. While in the wet season, these areas frequently suffered from flooding due to lower elevation than their surroundings. The Managed Aquifer Recharge (MAR) methods were applied to ease problems by constructing artificial recharge wells which can detain stormwater runoff and let it gradually infiltrate into the aquifer directly. For decades, the Department of Groundwater Resources started the MAR project to alleviate groundwater depletion and flooding over specific areas. However, most of the projects in the past lacked follow-up results and evaluation. Thus, later projects attempted to study recharge processes to evaluate the volume of recharged water through structures and calculate the infiltration rate through filter layers within the structures.

Recently, the field experiments of artificial groundwater recharge were conducted as 8-hour and 20-day experiments with shallow recharge wells in the Chao Phraya River basin regions. These two types of experiments provided similar results. The average recharge rates of 8-hour and 20-day experiments are 2.22 m3/hr and 2.57 m3/hr, respectively. Recharge rates of each well were independently distinct depending on sedimentation characteristics, aquifer thickness, and volume of dry voids. During the test, the recharge well continuously encountered the problem of sediment clogging due to using untreated water from neighbouring streams and ponds. This clogging issue needed to be treated regularly to maintain the efficiency of the recharge well.

Abstract

In Java Island, Indonesia, andesitic volcanic aquifers are the main water resource for domestic, agricultural, and industrial use. To guarantee sustainable management, a hydrogeological conceptual model is key. Electrical resistivity tomography (ERT) survey is one tool to characterize aquifer structures and extension, specifically in the medial facies of the Arjuno Welirang volcano. Fadillah et al. (2023) proposed a hydrogeological interpretation of the aquifers in the central to proximal-medial transition zone of the Arjuno Welirang volcano. This interpretation was based on geology, hydrogeology, and ERT and focused on major springs and boreholes. Nine additional ERT profiles and borehole data were collected downstream to enhance the medial facies’ understanding further. Seven ERT lines were conducted throughout the midstream part of the watershed. The results confirm the presence of two superimposed aquifers, a first unconfined aquifer made of volcanic sandstone and breccia with a vertical extension of 25 meters and a confined aquifer from 35 to 120 meters (maximum depth of investigation). This last one consists of tuffaceous breccia and volcanic sandstone and includes lava layers as well. A clayey layer with an average thickness of 10 meters constitutes the aquiclude/aquitard between those two aquifers. Furthermore, two ERT lines were conducted in the vicinity of the major spring located in the distal part of volcanic deposits, highlighting the development of a multi-layer alluvial aquifer system.

Abstract

In the Federal Capital Territory of Abuja (Abuja FCT, Nigeria), a population growth of about 400% between 2000 and 2020 has been reported. This trend, coupled with the persisting urban sprawling, is likely to result in severe groundwater quality depletion and contamination, thus undermining one of the area’s main freshwater supplies for drinking purposes. In fact, groundwater in Nigeria and Abuja FCT provides over 70% of the drinking purposes. Results of a groundwater vulnerability assessment that compared land use data from 2000 and 2020 showed that the region had been affected by a dramatic change with an increase in urbanized (+5%) and agricultural (+27%) areas that caused nitrate concentrations to exceed the statutory limit for drinking purposes in more than 30% of the monitored wells in 2021 and 40% in 2022. Although fertilizers are generally considered the main source of nitrate contamination, results suggest a possible mixed (urban and agricultural) pollution origin and a legacy of previous nitrogen pollution sources. The comparison between the DRASTIC-LU map and nitrate concentrations shows that the highest values are found in urban/peri-urban areas, in both shallow and deep wells. This investigation is the first step of a comprehensive nitrate pollution assessment in the region, which will provide decision-makers with adequate information for urban planning given the expected population growth in the area

Abstract

This study describes a novel methodology for predicting spring hydrographs based on Regional Climate Model (RCM) projections to evaluate climate change impact on karstic spring discharge. A combined stochastic-analytical modelling methodology was developed and demonstrated on the Bukovica karst spring catchment at the Durmitor National Park, Montenegro. As a first step, climate model projections of the EURO-CORDEX ensemble were selected, and bias correction was applied based on historical climate data. The regression function between rainfall and peak discharge was established using historical data.

The baseflow recession was described using a double-component exponential model, where hydrograph decomposition and parameter fitting were performed on the Master Recession Curve. Rainfall time series from two selected RCM scenarios were applied to predict future spring discharge time series. Bias correction of simulated hydrographs was performed, and bias-corrected combined stochastic-analytical models were applied to predict spring hydrographs based on RCM simulated rainfall data. Simulated climate scenarios predict increasing peak discharges and decreasing baseflow discharges throughout the 21st century. Model results suggest that climate change will likely exaggerate the extremities regarding climate parameters and spring discharge by the end of the century. The annual number of drought days shows a large variation over time. Extremely dry years are periodic, with a frequency between 5-7 years. The number of drought days seems to increase over time during these extreme years. The study confirmed that the applied methodology can successfully be applied for spring discharge prediction

Abstract

Across Africa, given the pressing challenges of climate change and widespread water, food and livelihood insecurity and poverty, there is an ever-increasing expanding role for groundwater in resilience building, especially in borderland communities. This situation is being investigated in several projects and geographies. This paper’s groundwater management analysis was based on literature reviews, key informant interviews (KIIs), and focus group discussions (FGDs) in selected case study areas throughout sub-Saharan Africa. The KIIs included representatives of water management institutions, community leaders, international development partners, the private sector and non-governmental organisations (NGOs) involved in the use or management of groundwater. The FGDs occurred in borderland communities in Ethiopia, Kenya, and Somalia (with these three countries sharing borders) and Mozambique, South Africa and Zimbabwe (with these three also sharing borders). The findings show that informal institutions such as clan, tribal or ethnic affiliations dictate access to natural resources such as groundwater in borderlands. These same Institutions also play a significant role in conflict resolution in the borderland areas. In addition, informal institutions play an essential role in groundwater management and should also be recognised – in engagements and formal water policies and legislation. Formal organisations, institutions and government structures should strengthen their focus on ensuring that discussions and decisions include informal role players. Further developing and enforcing conventions, land-use plans, and bylaws governing access to and use of groundwater should ensure engagement and co-creation of solutions towards effective water resource management.

Abstract

The current study investigates the spatial patterns and temporal dynamics of the groundwater and surface water interactions for integrated water resource management practices. This follows the results of the groundwater flow conceptual and numerical models developed for the Middle Letaba sub-catchment, indicating that groundwater and surface water interactions play a fundamental role in determining the hydrological water balance. The study area is an example of a fully allocated surface water resource in the northeastern part of South Africa, extensively developed for domestic use and agricultural farming. As a result of the semi-arid nature of the climate, limited surface water resources and increasing water demand, the situation has contributed to groundwater as the only dependable source of water supply for various uses. However, in the last few decades, periodic water level measurements in several boreholes indicated a continuous drop in the piezometric surface over time. This study utilised HydroGeoSphere to simulate water flow processes in a fully integrated and physically based model.

The results of the steady-state groundwater flow simulation indicated that recharge from the rainfall and river leakages are the most important components of the inflows that control the availability of groundwater. Water resources management scenarios suggest a continuous decline in water level, which strongly influences the groundwater flow dynamics and future availability of fresh water. Regular monitoring and management of groundwater level and abstraction are required to avoid overexploitation and possible groundwater contamination due to the strong interaction between surface water and groundwater.

Abstract

Groundwater is an essential source of water worldwide. The increased reliance on groundwater has caused the mining of many aquifers, a situation compounded by climate change, rising surface-air temperature, declining precipitation, and reduced groundwater recharge in many regions. The global annual intensity of groundwater use rose from 128 to 155 m3 per capita between 1950 (when the world population was 2.5 billion people) and 2021 (when the population was 7.9 billion people) and is herein projected to rise to 178 m3 per capita by 2050 as the world’s population is projected to increase (to 9.7 billion people by 2050) throughout the rest of the 21st century and beyond. This study projects a global annual groundwater depletion of 1,008 km3 by 2050, representing a 256% rise from the estimated 2010 depletion. This projection is most likely a lower bound of the actual groundwater depletion that would be realized considering environmental flows, historical trends of global economic growth, and climate-change impacts, thus being a harbinger of rising environmental degradation (e.g., land subsidence, seawater intrusion, streamflow reduction, aridification). Measures to achieve groundwater sustainability are herein identified.

Abstract

The Lower Berg River Aquifer System, situated in the Western Cape province of South Africa, is important to the towns that overlay it, as they rely on the aquifer for water supply, which supplements industrial development and residential growth. This aquifer system is important because surface water resources in the area are finite and fully allocated. Despite studies on the Lower Berg River Aquifer System since 1976, knowledge of the geological layers, recharge and discharge areas, and groundwater flow paths remain limited. This study aimed to provide greater insight and understanding of the aquifer to assist in better management. Investigations included a Time Domain Electromagnetic airborne geophysical survey, the assessment of groundwater levels, infiltration tests, hydrochemical analyses, and stable and radioactive isotope analyses. These methods allowed for the identification of the aquifer’s layers and extent, determination of water quality in different parts of the aquifer, delineation of flow paths through the saturated and unsaturated zones, identification of inter-aquifer flow, as well as different modes of recharge.

Abstract

Technological advances in recent years provide a unique opportunity to adopt new instruments for groundwater monitoring to reduce operating costs, obtain higher measuring accuracy and reliability, and accomplish comprehensive real-time monitoring. Microelectromechanical system (MEMS) technology enables small and low-cost energy-saving microsensors and integration with IOT for real-time monitoring. This presentation will discuss the findings of the performance of a newly developed instrument based on a MEMS piezoresistive pressure sensor. We demonstrate a path forward for the expansion of this research. The sensor is designed to be applicable to both open and closed systems for measuring groundwater level and pore water pressure. Tests show that MEMs (0-689 kPa range) can obtain full-scale accuracy between 0.2-0.3% in groundwater level prediction. However, the measurement result mainly depends on the appropriateness of the calibration method. Regarding pore pressure measurement under sealed conditions by gravel sand and cement-bentonite grout, a full-scale accuracy between 0.3% and 0.725% is accessible, depending on the backfill material. However, it was evident that backfill materials have considerable effects on the response time and accuracy of measurement, in which a stiff and less permeable grout can increase inaccuracy and time lag in measurement. Overall, the initial results have shown a promising future for this technology in groundwater monitoring. However, more tests and analyses are still required to improve sensor design, energy consumption for IOT applications, wireless module, installation system and its specifications such as accuracy, conformance, precision, and stability.

Abstract

Being extensively available and of high quality, groundwater is the primary source of freshwater in coastal regions globally. However, due to anthropogenic and natural drivers, groundwater salinisation is a growing threat to this resource’s long- and short-term viability. The causes and timescales of aquifer salinisation are complex and difficult to quantify, information essential for suitably timed mitigation strategies. One way to inform these strategies and develop storylines of future freshwater (un)availability is through 3D groundwater salinity modelling. These models can predict current groundwater distributions and quantitatively assess the impacts of a projected increase in groundwater extraction rates and sea-level rise. Until recently, detailed 3D models on this scale have been largely unattainable due to computational burdens and a shortage of in-situ data. Fortunately, recent developments in code parallelization, reproducible modelling techniques, and access to high-performance computing (e.g., via parallel SEAWAT) have made this feasible. Machine learning and data mining developments have also allowed an unprecedented opportunity to constrain and calibrate those models. With this in mind, we present our progress towards global 3D salinity modelling by showcasing a regional-scale model in the Mediterranean Sea area. This test case uses newly developed, automated geological and salinity interpolation methods to create initial conditions while implemented in a parallelized version of SEAWAT. The modelling outcomes highlight the potential of supra-regional scale modelling in the context of global (planetary) processes and localised anthropogenic effects.

Abstract

This study aims to investigate the groundwater circulation and hydrogeochemical evolution in the coastal zone of Xiamen, southeast China, which can provide a reference for the development of water resources and the protection of soil and water environment in the coastal areas. A close connection between mountains and the sea characterizes the southeast coast of China. Although rainfall is abundant, the topography limits it, and water resources quickly run into the sea. Coupled with a concentrated population, water is scarce. In addition, this area’s water and sediment environment are influenced by human activities and geological conditions. Its changing trend also needs further study. Therefore, using hydrochemical analysis, isotope technology, numerical simulation and other techniques, this study took Xiamen City on the southeast coast as an example to study the groundwater circulation and the environmental evolution of water and sediment. The results show that although the aquifer is thinner, there is still deep groundwater circulation, and the seawater intrusion range of deep aquifer is much further than that of shallow aquifer. In addition to geological causes, human activities have become the main factors affecting groundwater quality, especially nitrate and lead. The nitrate content even exceeds the content of the major ionic components. Introducing land-based pollutants has also contributed to declining seawater and sediment quality in the Bay area. In general, the main pollutants in coastal areas include nutrients, heavy metals and new pollutants.

Abstract

A mapping series was generated using the Vanrhynsdorp aquifer system to illustrate an improved standardization groundwater monitoring status reporting, that includes a progressive conceptual site model linked with spatial and temporal groundwater monitoring network assessment on an aquifer scale. The report consists of 4 segments: Base map provides a conceptual site model of a groundwater resource unit (GRU) delineating an area of 1456 km2 representing the geology and geological structures that make up the Vanrhynsdorp aquifer system.

The Groundwater Availability Map illustrated over a long-term trend analysis, the measured water levels indicate an 83% decreasing trend over an average period of 21.83 years, the water levels have declined by an average linear progression of 11.54 m (ranging 0.48-35.76 m) or 0.64 m per year, which equates to an estimated decline in storage of 218 Tm3 - 21 Mm3 within the GRU. The Groundwater EC map illustrated over the long-term analysis of an average period 24 years the average EC ranged between 57 - 791 mS/m, with certain areas tracking at a constant increasing trend beyond 1200 mS/m. The Groundwater Quality Characterization map provides EC contours and spatial Stiff diagram plots. The Stiff diagrams illustrate three aquifer water types namely, Na-Cl (Table Mountain Group Sandstones), Na-Cl with high SO4 concentration (Blouport and Aties Formation) and Na-Cl-HCO3 (Widouw Formation). These four segments of information products inform Resource Quality Objectives and the need for surveillance monitoring in conjunction with annual compliance monitoring and enforcement groundwater use audits.