Conference Abstracts

All Abstracts were presented at the Groundwater Conferences

Displaying 201 - 250 of 795 results
Title Presenter Name Presenter Surname Area Conference year Sort descending Keywords

Abstract

POSTER Most developing urban areas in semi-arid regions of Sub Saharan Africa are often forced to utilise groundwater as an alternate source of domestic water supplies. As such groundwater evaluations strategies often face dual challenges in terms of resource quantification and their quality evaluation. However, groundwater potential assessment and aquifer yield evaluations often present a challenge when the system is of crystalline basement nature where groundwater potential is highly spatially variable and cases of dry holes and seasonal wells have been reported. This study demonstrate the integrated combination of geophysical techniques, (namely, vertical electrical sounding, electrical resistivity tomography, magnetic mapping, and seismic refraction tomography) with both borehole monitoring and infiltration techniques in the groundwater prospecting and spatial yield analysis of the Urban Bulawayo crystalline basement aquifer. The Bulawayo Metropolitan Province of Zimbabwe is located in the semi-arid region of Zimbabwe with an average annual rainfall of below 500 mm and has had a prolonged dry spell has resulted in the dwindling of the existing surface water resources. The aquifer system consists of syenite granite and fractured basaltic greenstone crystalline basement complexes. Provisional geophysical results have shown that the thickness of the fractured zone sharply varies in terms of spatial distribution and often some sections are characterized by shallow surface fractured zone that may only be 20-30 m thick and some sections have a reported regolith of up to 60m in thickness. Borehole yield assessments and chemical analysis techniques will be done on drilled wells in order to come out with detailed spatial variation in the borehole yield and water quality variations across the aquifer system. All the technical evaluations are then integrated to produce a detailed hydro-geophysical map of the system that can be used in the technical groundwater management of the urban Bulawayo aquifer.

Abstract

LNAPL present in a monitoring well forms part of the broader groundwater system and is effectively influenced by hydrogeological conditions, which are always changing. Monitoring of LNAPL is therefore of utmost importance to identify and assess the LNAPL hydrogeological conditions. Both groundwater and LNAPL can exist as unconfined and confined. Groundwater is unconfined when the upper boundary is the water table and is confined as a result of the presence of a confining layer with a relatively low vertical hydraulic conductivity that inhibits the flow of all liquids. LNAPL becomes unconfined when the apparent free product thickness increases with a decreasing groundwater elevation and confined when apparent free product thickness increases with an increasing groundwater elevation. The LNAPL is confined as a result of the difference between the capillary properties of the mobile LNAPL zone and its confining layer. Specifically, LNAPL is confined when it cannot overcome the pore entry pressure of the confining unit. Consequently, LNAPL may be confined when groundwater is not. The paper attempts to describe the hydrogeological conditions in case histories of both primary and fractured aquifers and illustrate how to identify and assess the conditions. Data such as free phase and groundwater level monitoring, well logs, sieving of soil and LNAPL bail tests are used as assessment tools. The additional required data is gathered and integrated in the conceptual site model, followed by a revision of the CSM and a refinement of decision goals over time. Thus the CSM matures and enables an improved understanding of the site characteristics and the re-adjustment of decision criteria. {List only- not presented}

Abstract

Complementary use of electromagnetic frequency domain and electrosiesmic geophysical exploration methods in groundwater exploration in Zimbabwe.
Joseph M Zulu, Josrum Enterprises No. 129 A Fort Street, Albion Flats, 2nd Floor, Office Suite 5
Room 3, Bulawayo, Zimbabwe. Email Address: [email protected].
Abstract
Geophysical survey methods and divining are commonly used in groundwater exploration. In view of the current costs of drilling boreholes and fear of drilling a dry borehole, most people prefer the use of geophysical survey methods to have their boreholes sited. Some prefer the use of diving methods for initial siting and then confirmation of the identified site using geophysical survey methods. The key principle being complementarity of the methods to confirm the presence of water at the identified site. Electrical resistivity method and electromagnetic frequency domain methods are popular in ground water exploration in Zimbabwe, with electrical resistivity being the method of choice by many investigators. A new approach in groundwater exploration is proposed where complementarity of geophysical methods is exploited. A complementary approach of using geophysical methods in conjunction with geology, where two methods are used in investigating a site is proposed. In the study the latest technology in groundwater exploration, electrosiesmic survey method was used to complement the electromagnetic frequency domain method in various geological environments. Electromagnetic profiles were carried out on the target areas. Inversion was done on the collected and results presented as a pseudo section. Anomalies identified were further investigated using electrosiesmic sounding. The results of the sounding were presented in the form of a sounding curve. The subsurface layer thicknesses were calculated using forward modelling assuming the typical seismic velocity values of waves generated when passing through geological formations in the areas under investigation. The geology of areas studied include granite, greenstone, Kalahari sands, sandstones, mudstones and basalt of the Karoo stratigraphy. The approach produced impressive results. High yielding borehole sites were identified and successfully drilled in areas where it had been accepted that it was difficult to get water or in areas where it had been accepted there was no groundwater. Comparison of driller's log with models generated from geophysical survey results was also done.
Key words: electromagnetic, electroseismic, geology, complementarity, groundwater.
I acknowledge that this work has not been published elsewhere.

Abstract

Changes to South African water law and policy since the mid-90s have promoted integrated water resource management (IWRM) and the wider application of the principle of subsidiarity (decentralization), underpinned by the Constitutional emphasis on equity, human rights and redress. New water management organisations aim to promote equity, universal access to water, economic prosperity and gender equality but the reality, especially for groundwater, is less inspiring. The Water Act of 1998 envisages new organisations including Catchment Management Agencies (CMAs), Water User Organisations (WUAs) and Water Service Authorities (WSAs), but in many cases these organisations have inadequate capacity or do not exist at all. Only two of the nine (formerly nineteen) CMAs have been formed in more than fifteen years, and neither is yet financially self-reliant. The onerous process necessary to found a WUA and other disincentives have meant that fully-fledged WUAs as envisaged by the Water Act are rare. Hydrogeologists are unusual at Water Service Authority level, and the Department of Water and Sanitation (DWS) still assesses most groundwater resources. This has stoked argument between DWS and WSAs over long-term sustainable municipal water supplies. Our mandated organisations are not delivering the outcomes for groundwater that policy makers envisaged. Municipalities campaign for surface water instead of groundwater, yet groundwater is still the mainstay of rural water supply and has the most promise for underserved areas. Intractable problems with operation and maintenance are wrongly blamed on the primary groundwater resource, or on "shortages" of one kind or another. There is a need to emphasise function and outcomes rather than trust that these will follow automatically once "the right" organisations are in place. A hybrid of top-down expertise with a genuine focus on local outcomes is called for. We currently pay a considerable opportunity cost for delays, turf-wars and finger pointing - including reputational damage to groundwater as well as less reliable water supplies for the poorest South Africans.

Abstract

The present study applied multivariate statistical analysis (MSA) to investigate the status of the hydrochemistry of groundwater Upper Berg River Catchment, Western Cape, South Africa. Factors that influence the quality of groundwater are well established. The aim of the present study was to characterize groundwater quality in the Upper Berg River Catchment, using multivariate statistical analysis methods in order to establish the evolution and suitability of such waters for agricultural use in addition to confirming major factors that explain groundwater quality in the study area. Principal Component Analysis (PCA) and Hierarchical Cluster Analysis (CA) were applied to groundwater physicochemical data that were collected from 30 boreholes. Data collection and analysis followed standard procedure. The use of a Piper Diagram showed that Na-Cl water types were the predominant groundwater facies. Furthermore, PCA extracted five major factors that explained 83.11 % of the variation in the physicochemical characteristics of groundwater. Using Varimax rotation, two main factors, namely, surface water recharge and rock-water interactions, were extracted which collectively explained 60.81% of the variation in the groundwater physicochemical data. The two factors indicate that the predominant factors affecting groundwater quality in the study area are natural (biochemical) processes in the subsurface as well as interactions between the rock matrix and passing water. Cluster Analysis extracted three major groundwater clusters based on dissimilarities in groundwater physicochemical characteristics in different sites. The first cluster included 7 borehole sites located in the Franschhoek Valley area and 14 borehole sites located in the Robertsvlei Saddle area as well as the upper catchment (behind the Berg River Dam). The second and third clusters collectively included 9 groundwater sites within the Franschhoek Valley area. These sites were located on agricultural land where extensive vineyard and orchid cultivation is done. Groundwater quality in the Upper Berg River Catchment mainly reflects the influence of natural process of recharge, rock-water interactions and microbial activity. The quality of groundwater fell within Target Water Quality Guidelines for agricultural water use published by the Department of Water and Forestry Affairs meaning such waters are suitable for agricultural use.

Key words: Dendrogram, Groundwater quality, Hierarchical Cluster Analysis, Principal Component Analysis, Physicochemical, Spatial.

Abstract

The development of groundwater supply schemes is on the increase in South Africa. However, the sustainability of many of these wellfields is threatened due to the presence of iron (Fe2+) and manganese (Mn2+) ions in the groundwater. Their occurrence can manifest in problems with water quality and supply to consumers. The World Health Organisation recommends the removal of iron and manganese to below 0.3 mg/? and 0.1 mg/? respectively, to circumvent water quality risks. However, production borehole clogging is of greatest concern in the operation of wellfields due to the severe cost implications associated with reduced production. Clogging is caused by the precipitation of iron- and manganese-oxides at the borehole screen initiated by biogeochemical processes. Since Fe2+ and Mn2+ ions and the bacterial populations are naturally present in anoxic/anaerobic aquifer systems and the ingress of oxygen through pumping cannot be entirely prevented. The only approach to controlling borehole clogging is through management and rehabilitation procedures. Locally, these procedures have been implemented and in severe clogging cases the Blended Chemical Heat Treatment method has been applied. However, the effectiveness of rehabilitation has been limited. This can be ascribed to factors such as the incorrect production borehole design

Abstract

Groundwater is an important resource for multiple uses in South Africa. Hence, setting limits to its sustainable abstraction while assuring basic human needs is required. Due to prevalent data scarcity related to groundwater replenishment, which is the traditional basis for estimating groundwater availability, the present article presents a novel method for determining allocatable groundwater in quaternary catchments through information on streamflow. Using established methodologies for assessing baseflow, recession flow, and instream ecological flow requirement, the methodology develops a combined stepwise methodology to determine annual groundwater storage volume using linear reservoir theory, essentially linking low flows proportionally to upstream groundwater storages. The approach was trialled for twenty-one perennial and relatively undisturbed quaternary catchments with longterm and reliable streamflow records. Using the Desktop Reserve Model, maintenance low instream flow requirements necessary to meet present ecological state of the streams were determined, and baseflows in excess of these flows were converted into allocatable groundwater storages on an annual basis. Results show that groundwater development potential exists in nineteen of the catchments, with upper limits to allocatable groundwater volumes (including present uses) ranging from 0.02 to 2.60 Mm3/a over the catchments. With a secured availability of these volumes 75% of the years, variability between years is assumed to be manageable. A significant (R2 = 0.86) correlation between baseflow index and the drainage time scale for the catchments underscores the physical basis of the methodology and also enables the reduction of the procedure by one step, omitting recession flow analysis. The method serves as an important complementary tool for the assessment of the groundwater part of the Reserve and the Groundwater Resource Directed Measures in South Africa.

Abstract

The eastern coastal plain of South Africa has one of the outstanding natural wetland and coastal sites of Africa. The estuaries are complex and dynamic systems sustained by both groundwater and surface water. These systems are driven primarily by changing sea level and fluctuating climatic conditions, especially river runoff and sedimentation rates, which have been heavily affected by land use change. The largest lake, St Lucia, lies at the bottom end of several rivers, some of which have major afforestation within their catchments. Given that there is a strong connection between surface water and groundwater, a significant driver of the reduced river runoff constitutes reduced groundwater baseflows due to the lowering of groundwater levels in the upstream reaches of the lake's catchments. The remaining large lakes (Lake Sibaya and the Kosi Bay Lake system) are largely groundwater driven and are also affected by increasing impacts on the groundwater sustaining the lakes. There is an urgent need to quantify the impact of land use change, particularly increasing plantation forestry, on these coastal estuarine systems. While previous work has been undertaken to better understand the complex environment, this study examines the coastal environment (Lake St Lucia, Lake Sibaya and the Kosi Bay lakes) in an integrated manner and considers the impacts of various land use activities on the system, both in the 'buffer zone' surrounding the lakes and within the upstream reaches of the river catchments. The study builds on previous investigations and utilises results from existing models as well as available field data. The integrated Pitman Model is used to model the groundwater/surface water dynamics and will be validated using existing numerical model results, observed stream flow, groundwater levels and lake level information. While the model has been established at a quaternary catchment scale for the upstream reaches of the rivers, the downstream reaches have been modelled at smaller spatial scales dictated by groundwater flow directions. A wetland sub-model has been established to represent the numerous and varied wetlands while a specific sub-model has been developed to represent the hydrodynamics of Lake St Lucia and its complex connections to the sea. The currently ongoing study aims to quantify the current and future land use change impacts on the groundwater and surface water resources sustaining the lakes.

Abstract

Different biological and chemical transport results are evaluated in this study. Ecoli and PDR1 were selected as the biological tracers with salt and rhodamine as chemical tracers. The transport experiments were evaluated through the primary aquifer material found at the University of the Western Cape research site. A series of controlled experiments under laboratory and field conditions was conducted. Each provides a different kind of data and information. The results from laboratory studies could be used to better design the field studies. In both cases, the data collected was to provide information on fate and transport of microbes in groundwater. The field design phase of the experiment was an up-scaling of the laboratory phase of this project. The amount injected into the aquifer was increased in proportion to the size of the research site. Tracer tests using chemical and microbial tracers were carried out simultaneously. Results of laboratory tests show a 5 times slower transport of microbes, compared to salts.. The salts at field scale show a breakthrough occurring after 2 days whereas the microbes never managed to breakthrough with the experiment stopped after 45 days. A new borehole was drilled closer to reduce distance/ travel time, but this had no effect on field results for the microbes. {List only- not presented}

Abstract

Water resource management and risk management rely heavily on the availability of data and information. This includes the volumes of water needed, the volumes of water available, where the available water is and where it would be needed, etc. Historical records help to determine past use and gives a way to predict future use in the case of water resource planning while it helps to predict the possibility of floods and droughts when it comes to risk management. Rainfall data can provide valuable data for both water resource planning and risk management, since it is the input to the hydrologicalcycle. It is possible to determine dry and wet cycles using the cumulative deviation from mean that is calculated from the measured rainfall data. This was done for the Gnangara Mound in Australia, with the results giving a fair representation of the dry and wet cycles in the area. Data measured over a period of about 30 years for the Zachariashoek sub-catchment analyzed in the same fashion provided wet-dry cycles of about 8 years. The rainfall measurements had been taken at various settings around the catchment, and varied from place to place and differed from that measured at the WeatherSA stations in the vicinity. This article will draw a comparison between the Zachariashoek data and the WeatherSA data to determine whether the WeatherSA data followed the same patterns for the wet-dry cycles observed in Zachriashoek. It will then analyse the longer data record available for the WeatherSA data from 1920 to 2012. It is expected that the shorter wet-dry cycles seen in Zachariashoek will become part of longer wet-dry cycles that can be used in water resource planning and risk management. Rainfall is also dependent on a number of factors

Abstract

In order to obtain a better understanding of a groundwater system, it is very important to understand the recharge mechanisms of such a system. Several intensive investigations have been done, documenting the different methodologies to derive recharge. Most of these studies have been centred on the detailed analysis and description of isotopes, which are either a characteristic of the water, the rock, or both. The isotopes of strontium, in particular the isotopic 87Sr/86Sr ratio, is one of such methodologies applied to drive the sources of recharge. The Oshivelo management area is part of the greater Owambo Basin, with no major rivers flowing through the project area, while the Omuramba Owambo, which crosses the area from east to west, bears water only rarely. This rural area therefore heavily relies on groundwater resources. Towards the end of the 20th century, through exploratory drillings an artesian aquifer in the southern part of the Owambo basin was discovered. Several investigation and water supply boreholes have been drilled, with the major findings summarised: - In the late 1990s DWA (DWA, 1999) drilled 12 exploration boreholes and six observation boreholes, showing high yields ranging between 40 and 200 m?/h. One of the boreholes yielded saline water, classified under the Oshivelo Artesian Aquifer and it was recognized that there may be a risk of saltwater intrusion when beginning to exploit the aquifer. It was assumed that the aquifer receives local recharge from the Etosha Limestone Member aquifer in the order of 3.75 MCM/a and additional unquantified recharge from the Otavi Dolomite Aquifer. - In the early 2000s KfW funded a study of the Tsumeb area, including the development of a groundwater flow model according to which an amount of 31 MCM/a would be leaving the Tsumeb area at the northern model boundary, i.e. flow into the Oshivelo Region. - The DWA plans to supply the north-western Oshikoto Region with water from the KOV2 aquifer via a pipeline in order to overcome water shortages there and to become more independent from surface water supplies from Angola. Though, through the groundwater model, a first estimate of groundwater resources availability has been established, the source of recharge is yet to be determined, including the flow mechanisms. Without, this vital piece of information, a valuable groundwater resource may be eventually utilized unsustainably. This presentation will focus primarily on the determination of groundwater recharge mechanisms, which would produce additional input to refine the existing groundwater flow model, concentrating on the Oshivelo Aquifer system. Upon the successful completion of this investigation, the next step would then be to evaluate the groundwater flow model and use it for a proper groundwater management plan. {List only- not presented}

Abstract

Understanding the hydrogeochemical processes that govern groundwater quality is important for sustainable management of the water resource. A study with the objective of identifying the hydrogeochemical processes and their relation with existing quality of groundwater was carried processes in the shallow aquifer of the Lubumbashi river basin. The multivariate statistical approach includes self organizing maps (SOM'S) of neural networks, hierarchical cluster (HCA) and principal component analysis of the hydrochemical data were used to define the geochemical evaluation of aquifer system based on the ionic constituents, water types, hydrochemical facies and groundwater factors quality control. Water presents a spatial variability of chemical facies (HCO3- - Ca2+ - Mg2+, Cl- - Na+ + K+, Cl- - Ca2+ - Mg2+ , HCO3- - Na+ + K+ ) which is in relation to their interaction with the geological formation of the basin. The results suggests that different natural hydrogeochemical processes like simple dissolution, mixing, weathering of carbonate minerals and of silicate weathering and ion exchange are the key factors. Added to this is the imprint of anthropogenic input (use of fertilizers, septic practice poorly designed and uncontrolled urban discharges). Limited reverse ion exchange has been noticed at few locations of the study.

Abstract

Noble gases are used in this study to investigate the recharge thermometry and apparent groundwater residence time of the aquifers on the eastern slope of the Wasatch Mountains in the Snyderville Basin of Summit County, Utah. Recharge to and residence time for the basin aquifer in the Salt Lake Valley, Utah, from the western slope of the Wasatch Mountain range by 'mountain-block recharge' (MBR), is a significant source of subsurface flow based on noble gas and tritium (3H) data. The Snyderville Basin recharge thermometry from 15 wells and 2 springs indicates recharge temperatures fall within the temperature "lapse space" defined by the recharge thermometry determined in the study of MBR for the Salt Lake Valley and the mean annual lapse rate for the area. Groundwater residence times for the Snyderville Basin were obtained using tritium and helium-3 (3He). The initial 3H concentrations calculated for the samples were evaluated relative to the 3H levels in the early 1950s (pre-bomb) to categorize the waters as: (1) dominantly pre-bomb; (2) dominantly modern; or (3) a mixture of pre-bomb and modern. Apparent ages range from almost 6 years to more than 50 years. Terrigenic helium-4 (4He) is also used as a groundwater dating tool with the relationship between terrigenic 4He in Snyderville Basin aquifers and age based on the apparent 3H/3He ages of samples containing water from only one distinct time period. The 4He is then used to calculate groundwater residence times for samples that are too old to be dated using the 3H/3He method. The mean groundwater residence times calculated with both methods indicate the water yielded by wells and springs in the Snyderville Basin generally ranges from 6 to more than 50 years. In addition, the calculated terrigenic 4He age for the pre-bomb component of many samples was found to exceed 100 years. While terrigenic 4He residence times are not as definitive as those calculated with the 3H/3He method, or chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), age dating with terrigenic 4He allows initial estimates to be made for groundwater residence times in the Snyderville Basin, and is an important tool for establishing groundwater residence times greater than 50 years. Historic water levels from production wells indicate a declining water table. This trend in conjunction with precipitation data for the area illustrates the decline in the water levels to be a function of pumping from the aquifers. Groundwater residence times in the Snyderville Basin and declining water levels support the need for a groundwater management program in the Snyderville Basin to effectively sustain the use of groundwater resources based on groundwater age. {List only- not presented}

Abstract

A groundwater decision support system (DSS) that incorporates stakeholder participation has been developed for Siloam Village in Limpopo Province, South Africa. Residents of Siloam Village are dependent on groundwater to augment inadequate pipe borne water supply. This creates the need for a DSS that ensures efficient and sustainable management and utilization of water. Such a DSS is constituted of both quantitative and qualitative components. The study further proposes framework for implementation of the DSS which incorporates community participation. This will act as a tool for empowering and educating the communities in rural villages so that they can be able to manage their water resources. The developed DSSs will make it possible for Siloam community to operate their water supply systems efficiently taking into account environmental needs and water quality

Abstract

Since the first decant of acid mine drainage in the West Rand in 2002, a great deal of effort has gone into researching the challenges which it poses there and in the adjacent Central Rand and East Rand Gold Fields. Short-term interventions have been implemented to maintain water at conservatively-determined safe levels and remove the worst contaminants from the water pumped from the mined. A feasibility study, looking at the long-term options has proposed treatment of water to a much higher standard, identifying a number of potential end-users of the treated water and highlighted the extremely high costs involved in responsible management. During the second half of 2010, a team of experts was convened to assess problems related to acid mine drainage in the Witwatersrand and propose solutions. A number of recommendations were made and the most urgent - the need for a short-term intervention to bring things under control and the the feasibility study for long-term management of the problems were undertaken. Nevertheless, despite the intense focus on the problem, a number of questions have remained unanswered. Throughout the period of min flooding, no detailed systematic monitoring of surface water flow has been undertaken, preventing the detailed apportionment of pollution between underground and surface sources. Ingress control measures have been proposed, but funding mechanisms, regulatory hurdles and challenges relating to long-term management have not all been comprehensively addressed. On a more positive note, the installation and operation of pumps to control the water level in the Western and Central Basins will start to provide valuable data regarding the response of the flooded mine workings to pumping, assisting in the characterisation of the hydraulic properties and behaviour of the large voids. This will facilitate the optimisation of pumping strategies and the refinement of environmental critical levels and assist in the development of more sustainable management options.

Abstract

POSTER The Department of Water and Sanitation (DWS) is the custodian of South Africa's water and thus is imperative that it reports on its state as the National Water Act of 1998 requires regular reporting to Parliament by the Minister. Hence, the annual compilation of report entitled "The National State of Water in South Africa." This report aims to give an overview of the status and trends of water quality and quantity, further assisting with international water reporting obligations to SADC Region, African Continent, and Globally e.g. the United Nations Commission on Sustainable Development. This information empowers the public and provides knowledge to water managers for informed decision-making. The main purpose is to enhance quality, accessibility and relevance of data and information relating to the goal of Integrated Water Resource Management towards attaining holistic Integrated Water Management, and Integrated Water Cycle Management in future. Three distinct requirements for collecting data by DWS are: (i) assessing and comparing the status and trends for both quantity and quality; (ii) monitoring for water use and (iii) monitoring for compliance to licence conditions. Such information is further used to assess the effectiveness of policies implemented and identify the existing gaps. Various challenges to the country's water demand proper integrated water resources planning and management. The report is divided into Themes such as, Resource Management, Water Services/Delivery, Water Development and Finance, based on selected indicators. The indicators are strategically selected to provide a representative picture of the state, as well as the changes over time to the drivers, pressures, impacts and responses related to the chosen themes. These Indicators include: Climatic Conditions, Water Availability, Water Use, Water Protection, Water Quality, Water Service Delivery, Water Infrastructure, Water Finance, and Sanitation. The report for Hydrological Year 2013/2014 has been completed and it shows that the amount of water available varies greatly between different places and seasons, and from one year to another. The average total storage was around 85% of full supply capacity in September 2014. Surface water quality is generally facing a threat from eutrophication and microbial pollution emanating mainly from mismanaged water (and waste) treatment plants and related landuse activities. Groundwater quality is generally good except in some localised areas where mining and industrial activities are prevalent. With regards to infrastructure; vandalism, lack of maintenance & management skills reflect on/as non-revenue water, highlighting the need for more funding towards maintenance, especially in groundwater which is normally wrongly deemed as an unreliable resource. In the past 20 years, water services delivery to communities has improved as the Millennium Development Goals have been met and surpassed, while the sanitation access goals were likely to be met.

Abstract

The continuous increase in demand for water from a growing population and associated additional housing projects in the town of Steytlerville in the Eastern Cape Province has resulted in a shortage in water supply from the existing boreholes. In order to supplement the additional demand, a bulk water augmentation scheme using surface water from the Groot Rivier at a point immediately east of the Hadley crossing was implemented. This was done by drilling two large diameter production boreholes vertically into the alluvium and underlying bedrock of the river to a depth of intersecting the entire thickness of the mapped alluvium. Two boreholes were connected to a network of subsurface drains that allowed for recharge from the open channel to flow into the production boreholes. In addition to the sub-surface drain system connecting the sump boreholes, three recharge drains were constructed upstream of the abstraction boreholes. The purpose of these drains were to recharge the underlying paleo-channel to improve the water quality and yield from the paleo-channel. This was achieved by connecting the sub-surface drainage pipe to a vertical screened recharge borehole. The end result of the study was the successful implementation of a alternate borehole yield of 14l/s from the production wells to the Steytlerville town water reticulation supply.

Abstract

South Africa is facing a water supply crisis caused by a combination of low rainfall, high evaporation rates, and a growing population whose geographical demands for water do not conform to the distribution of exploitable water supplies. This situation is particularly critical in the river systems comprising the Limpopo River basin where every tributary river has been exploited to the limits possible by conventional engineering approaches. These attempts to meet society's demands for water for domestic, irrigation, mining and industrial uses have caused a progressive deterioration of the water resources as well as the aquatic ecosystems in these rivers. In addition to the pressure exerted by scarce water resources and deteriorating water quality, South Africa is facing a critical shortage of electrical power. There is an urgent need to address the country's electricity shortage through the building of new coal mines and coal fired power and the Waterberg area has been identified for these purposes. All of these new operations will be accompanied by a rapid growth in population which will put further stress on the water resources as well as the existing sewage plants. The Waterberg region is part of the Bushveld which can be classified as a hot and an arid region. Due to irrigation that currently exist in the region, which stems from the climate conductive to agriculture production and its current mining development, based on the vast mineral deposits present, the current water availability and water use in the Waterberg region is relatively in balance. Meaning that the available water resources in the Limpopo basin will not be able to meet the domestic and industrial demands for water that the new developments will pose and the flows in several rivers have already changed from perennial to seasonal and episodic. In order to satisfy the demand of water that will be required by the above mentioned projects, the Mokolo Crocodile Water Augmentation Project will supply additional water to the region. However, this area still contains a relatively high number of natural or near-natural ecosystems, and it is important that this natural capital is not significantly eroded in the development process. This is possible with effective environmental planning to limit and mitigate negative social, ecological and economic impacts.

This project promotes science-based environmental assessment and planning by developing an understanding of key aquatic ecological indicators and their associated thresholds. The project vision is to promote improved outcomes for stream and river ecosystem health, and ultimately human health and well-being in the Waterberg area. The outcomes of the study will be used to detect existing processes of change in aquatic ecosystems and estimate the likely future changes that increased coal mining, human population and water transfers will cause.

Abstract

There is growing concern that South Africa's urban centres are becoming increasingly vulnerable to water scarcity due to stressed surface water resources, rapid urbanisation, climate change and increasing demand for water. Given South Africa's water scarcity, global trends for sustainable development, and awareness around the issues of environmental degradation and climate change, there is a need to consider alternative water management strategies. Water Sensitive Urban Design (WSUD) is an approach to sustainable urban water management that attempts to achieve the goal of a 'Water Sensitive City'. The concept of a Water Sensitive City seeks to ensure the sustainable management of water using a range of approaches such as the reuse of water (stormwater and wastewater), exploiting alternative available sources of supply, sustainable stormwater management and improving the resource value of urban water through aesthetic and recreational appeal. Therefore, WSUD attempts to assign a resource value to all forms of water in the urban context, viz. stormwater, wastewater, potable water and groundwater. However, groundwater is often the least considered because it is a hidden resource, often overlooked as a form a water supply (potable and non-potable) and it is often poorly protected. The management of urban groundwater and understanding the impacts of WSUD on groundwater in South African cities is challenging, due to complex geology, ambiguous groundwater regulations and management, data limitations, and lack of capacity. Thus, there is a need for an approach to assess the feasibility of management strategies such as WSUD, so that the potential opportunities and impacts can be quantified and used to inform the decision making process. An integrated modelling approach, incorporating both surface and subsurface hydrological processes, allows various urban water management strategies to be tested due to the complete representation of the hydrological cycle. This integration is important as WSUD is used to manage surface water, but WSUD known to utilise groundwater as a means of treatment and storage. This paper assesses the application, calibration and testing of the integrated model, MIKE SHE, and examines the complexities and value of establishing an integrated groundwater and surface water model for urban applications in South Africa. The paper serves to demonstrate the value of the application of MIKE SHE and integrated modelling for urban applications in a South African context and to test the models performance in Cape Town's unique conditions, accounting for a semi-arid climate, complex land use, variable topography and data limitations. Furthermore, this paper illustrates the value of integrated modelling as a management tool for assessing the implementation of WSUD strategies on the Cape Flats, helping identifying potential impacts of WSUD interventions on groundwater and the potential opportunities for groundwater to contribute towards ensuring to Cape Town's water security into the future.

Abstract

Aurecon was appointed to conduct groundwater exploration for production well fields in the towns of Setlagole and Madibogo. These towns are located in an arid part of the North West province on the edge of the Kalahari. The landscape is flat and covered by aeolian sand underlain by basement granite of the Kraaipan Group Geology.
Historically groundwater exploration consisted of reconnaissance geophysical surveys followed by detail ground surveys. Where no potentially water bearing geological structures are shown on geological maps & aerial photos, the project area would be divided into a grid on which the ground geophysical survey would be done. This type of exploration is time consuming and expensive. In some cases the terrain or cultural noise prohibits the use of conventional geophysical methods, with only more expensive and time consuming methods being left as an option. This is where the high resolution airborne magnetic survey excels. The results obtained from this type of survey are of such nature that only a small amount of ground geophysics is necessary to locate drilling targets. This survey method is also cost effective allowing a larger area to be covered in a short amount of time as compared to conventional ground techniques.
This paper will discuss successes achieved using high resolution aeromagnetic surveys as the basis for groundwater exploration in traditionally low-yielding igneous geology.

Abstract

A groundwater assessment was conducted to identify and predict the contamination and transport properties of a groundwater system. The motivation for the study was the rising concern of a farm owner about the deteriorating water quality of the aquifer system. An investigation of the surface and groundwater quality indicated that two fertilizer dumpsites were the sources of pollution. Water analyses revealed elevated concentrations of Ca, Mg, K, F, NO3, SO4, Mn and NH4 within boreholes near the pollution sources. The NH4 and NO3 concentrations were exceptionally high: 11 941 mg/L and 12 689 mg/L, respectively. These high concentrations were the direct result of the dumping of fertilizer. The rise in these concentrations may also have been catalysed by the nitrogen cycle and the presence of the Nitrosomonas bacterium species. Due to the high solubility of NO3, and because soils are largely unable to retain anions, NO3 may enter groundwater with ease, and could migrate over large distances from the source. Elevated NO3 in groundwater is a concern for drinking water because it can interfere with blood-oxygen levels in infants and cause methemoglobinemia (blue-baby syndrome). A geophysical study was undertaken within the area of investigation to gain insight on the underlying geological structures. The survey indicated preferential flow paths within the aquifer system along which rapid transport of contaminant is likely to occur.
Key words: aquifer system, groundwater quality analyses, fertilizer, nitrogen cycle, Nitrosomonas species, geophysics.

Abstract

Pollution of underground water is fast becoming a global problem and South Africa is not immune to this problem. The principal objective of this paper is to investigate the effectiveness of laws and policies put in place to mitigate underground water pollution. The paper also seeks to examine the causes and types of underground water pollution followed by a closer look into the laws and policies in place to mitigate the pollution levels. Finally, the paper seeks to ascertain whether the current policies are properly implemented. The paper follows content analysis (desk research) to achieve the objectives. Policy recommendations are given based on the findings. {List only- not presented}

Abstract

The urban and rural communities sources of water for domestic and other uses come from groundwater in most parts of Ethiopia. But the groundwater is not free from challenge. Fluoride is one of those critical problems which are affecting the health of inhabitants of this corridor. There are places where the fluoride contents reach more than 10mg/l. groundwater Treatment plants, changing the water scheme source from surface water and related efforts have been made so far to alleviation such challenges. Fluoride affects bones and teeth by changing its color and easily affected to a number of health complication in the rift valley of Ethiopia. {List only- not presented}

Abstract

Simple and cost-effective techniques are needed for land managers to assess and quantify the environmental impacts of hydrocarbon contamination. During the case study, hydrocarbon plume delineation was carried out using hydrogeological and geophysical techniques at a retail filling station located in Gauteng.

Laboratory and controlled spill experiments, using fresh hydrocarbon product, indicate that fresh hydrocarbons generally have a high electrical resistivity, whilst biodegraded hydrocarbons have a lower resistivity. This is attributed to the changes from electrically resistive to conductive behaviour with time due to biodegradation. As such, it should be possible to effectively delineate the subsurface hydrocarbon plume using two-dimensional (2D) Electrical Resistivity Tomography (ERT). As part of the case study, two traverses were conducted using an Electric Resistivity Tomography (ERT) survey with an ABEM SAS1000 Lund imaging system. The resultant 2D tomographs were interpreted based on the resistivity characteristics and subsurface material properties to delineate the plume. Localised resistivity highs were measured in both models and are representative of fresh hydrocarbons whereas areas of low resistivity represented areas of biodegraded hydrocarbons.

More conventional plume delineation techniques in the form of intrusive soil vapour and groundwater vapour surveys as well as hydrochemical anlayses of the on-site monitoring wells were used to compare the results and to construct the detailed Conceptual Site Model. During the investigation, four existing monitoring wells located on the site and additional two wells were installed downgradient of the Underground Storage Tanks (USTs) in order to determine the extent of the plume.

In conclusion, a comparison was found between the groundwater results and geophysical data obtained during the case study and it was concluded that ERT added a significant contribution to the Conceptual Site Model.

Abstract

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Abstract

The Saldanha / Langebaan area is expanding at a significant rate, increasing the water demand for the area. The expansion comes from the industrial, residential and tourism sector. In addition there are economically viable deposits of silica and phosphate in the area. Ecosystem functioning in the area is also to a degree dependent on groundwater. All of these factors require an improved understanding of the geohydrology of the area. The geology of the area consists of basement Cape Granite and Malmesbury Group rocks that underlie the sediments of the Sandveld Group. The unconsolidated formations present, are (in order of oldest to youngest) as follows: - Elandsfontyn Formation (oldest): This formation overlies the bedrock in depressions and palaeo-channels in the bedrock. This formation is about 40 m thick and is composed of upward fining quartz sediments. - Varswater Formation: This formation is composed of marine deposits and is restricted to the western (seaward) parts of a bedrock depression to the east of the Langebaan Lagoon and Saldanha. The formation is characterized by rounded quartz grains. - Langebaan Formation: This formation consists of calc-arenites. The sediments are generally grey to cream coloured and consist of quartz and shell fragments, the grain size ranges from coarse to fine and the consolidation is variable. - Witzand Formation (youngest). This formation consists of light-coloured, calcareous, coastal dune sand that can be distinguished from the underlying consolidated Langebaan Formation. The Elandsfontyn Aquifer System (EAS) and the Langebaan Road Aquifer System (LRAS) are the main aquifer systems in the area. These aquifer systems are defined by palaeo-channels that have been filled with gravels of the Elandsfontyn Formation and represent preferred groundwater flow paths. Within each of these aquifer systems (EAS and LRAS) two aquifer units are present. Namely, the confined Lower Aquifer Unit (LAU) geologically consisting of the basal gravels of the Elandsfontyn Formation and the Upper Aquifer Unit (UAU) composed of consolidated sands and calcrete. The two units are separated by a clay aquitard. A numerical model has been established for the area, and extends from the Berg River to the Langebaan Lagoon. Granite outcrop and river system define the other boundaries of the model. Extensive logging of groundwater levels by the Department of Water and Sanitation (DWS) has enabled the accurate establishment of a model. In addition extensive field work and a detailed hydrocensus, as well as the capture of a lot of historical information has resulted in a comprehensive GIS which assists with the refinement of the numerical model. The model provides a valuable tool in modelling potential impacts whether they been from planned groundwater abstraction or artificial recharge. {List only- not presented}

Abstract

Studies have shown that the use of natural water (drinking and bathing) with high level of 222Rn concentration may contribute to negative health effect in human beings. Thermal springs located in Limpopo province were sampled for the determination of 222Rn concentration by gamma ray spectrometry. The spring water has been used for domestic purposes: drinking and bathing, and for recreation bathing mainly. 19 samples were collected between thermal springs emanation points and swimming facilities (out and in doors). Radon-222 concentration found in these water ranges from 0.2 to 624 Bq/l. These results indicate that 7 thermal springs may represent increasing risk on bathing or inhalation of radon gas, leading to an increased risk of healthy.

Abstract

POSTER Water resources are not just lakes, glaciers and polar ice caps and rivers; however one of the largest water resources is underground water well-known as Groundwater. Groundwater is one of the most important source of water as it the huge reservoir for freshwater. Groundwater can be defined as water existing underneath the earth surface in rock bodies known as aquifers. Approximately 140 communities in South Africa depend on groundwater as the source of water (Department of water affairs and forestry, 1998). Nevertheless groundwater is vulnerably to pollutants resulting from surrounding environmental effects which lead to poor groundwater quality. Numerous environmental effects have a huge impact in polluting groundwater such as pesticides, seawater encroachment, sewage effluent discharges to the ground and storage tanks underground; hence one need to identify, evaluate and come up with solutions on eradication of all these environmental effects that lead to groundwater pollution ( Hearth 1983).

The objectives of the report will be based on minimizing the groundwater pollution at the source and to restore groundwater quality to extent that the beneficial users recognise its suitability. Inspection in University of the Western Cape (UWC) campus site and Rawsonville site will be conducted by BSc Environment and Water Science students of UWC in June using various tools in order to identify and monitor surrounding environmental effects towards groundwater pollution. UWC campus research site is located on top of the Cape Flats primary aquifer (unconfined sand aquifer); Cape Flat aquifer is overlain by an impermeable bedrock Malmesbury (shale) secondary fractured aquifer. Generally this borehole test will be based on testing on how the surrounding environmental impacts with various aquifer properties affect the groundwater quality or whether the surrounding environment interrupts the groundwater quality in Cape flats aquifer and Rawsonville site. The UWC campus site has low infiltration compared with Rawsonville site as it is surrounded by vegetation that plays role in trapping water from infiltrating therefore this aquifer is less likely to be contaminated by pollutants from the land surface, however with it being surrounded by residential areas and industries it is likely to be polluted. Rawsonville on the other hand is located in the grape farm which makes it easier for the site to be contaminated by fertilisers used for agricultural practice. The pumping test will further enable one in knowing the quantity of groundwater in UWC campus site and Rawsonville site thus extraction levels for municipal works, irrigation and so forth will be monitored in a correct manner (Department of water affairs and forestry, 1998). Finally groundwater models will be used to further investigation on the behaviour of groundwater systems.

Abstract

The understanding of groundwater and surface water interaction is important for the planning of water resources in particular for farming areas. The interactions between groundwater and surface water are complex. To understand the relationship of groundwater and surface water interactions it is important to have a good understanding of the relation of climate, landform, geology, and biotic factors, a sound hydrogeoecological framework. Surface-water and groundwater ecosystems are viewed as linked components of a hydrologic continuum leading to related sustainability issues. In this study the Gevonden farm in Rawsonville will be used as the study site. This study site forms part of the Table Mountain Group (TMG). The methods to establish the relationship of groundwater and surface water interaction are collection of rainfall data monthly, river channel parameters at the farm such as the discharge on a monthly bases, chemistry of the water in the stream and groundwater were also be analyzed and pumping tests will be conducted twice to get the hydraulic parameters of the aquifer. The aquifer parameters will be analyzed using the Theis and Cooper-Jacob methods. The river has lower water levels in the summer months and this is also the case in the water levels in the boreholes on the farm, however in winter the opposite is true. The chemical analyses which are identical indicate that there is groundwater and surface water interaction in the farm. The degree of the interaction differs throughout the year. The results show that the interaction is influenced by the rainfall. The results clearly suggests that the farmers need to construct dams and drill pumping borehole in order to have enough water to water their crops in the summer season as by that time the river is almost dry.
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Abstract

The Bedford Dam is the upper storage dam for the Ingula Pumped Storage Scheme and is situated in the Ingula/Bedford Wetland. This wetland has a high structural diversity which supports a unique assemblage of plants and invertebrates. The flow regulation and water purification value is of particular importance as the wetland falls within the Greater Vaal River catchment. Concern was raised with respect to the potential negative impact of the newly constructed dam on the dynamic water balance within the wetland. An assessment of the extent to which groundwater drives / sustains the wetland systems and the water requirements needed to sustain the wetland processes was determined. This includes establishing the impact of the Bedford Dam on the groundwater and wetland systems as well as providing recommendations on management and monitoring requirements. The hydropedological interpretations of the soils within the study area indicate that baseflow to the wetland is maintained through perennial groundwater, mainly recharged from infiltration on the plateau, and was confirmed through isotope sampling and hydrometric measurements. It is apparent that the surface flows in the main wetland are fed by recent sources, while the subsurface layers in the wetland are sustained by the slower moving near-surface and bedrock groundwater. The movement of groundwater towards the wetland is hindered by the numerous dykes creating a barrier to flow. Nevertheless, there seems to be a good connection between the groundwater sources in the upland and the surface drainage features that conduct this water to the contributing hillslopes adjacent to the main wetland. The surface flows of the main wetland are sustained by contributions from tributary fingers. The discharge out of the wetland is highly seasonal

Abstract

The karst aquifer downstream of the actively decanting West Rand Gold Field (a.k.a. the Western Basin) has for decades been receiving mine water discharge. Evidence of a mine water impact in the Bloubank Spruit catchment can be traced back to the early-1980s, and is attributed to the pumping out of so-called "fissure water" encountered during active underground mining operations for discharge on surface. Rewatering of the mine void following the cessation of subsurface mining activities in the late-1990s resulted in mine water decant in 2002. The last five hydrological years (2009?'10 to 2013?'14) have experienced the greatest volume and worst quality of mine water discharge in the 45-year flow and quality monitoring record (since 1979?'80) of the Bloubank Spruit system, causing widespread alarm and concern for the receiving karst environment. The focus of this attention is the Cradle of Humankind World Heritage Site, with earlier speculation fuelled by an initial dearth of information and poor understanding of the dynamics that inform the interaction of surface and subsurface waters in this hydrosystem.

Oblivious to these circumstances, the natural hydrosystem provides an invaluable beneficial function in mitigating adverse impacts on the water resources environment at no cost to society. The hydrologic and hydrogeologic framework that informs this natural benefaction is described in quantitative physical and chemical terms that define the interaction of allogenic and autogenic water sources in a subregional context before highlighting the regional benefit. The subregional context is represented by the Bloubank Spruit catchment, a western tributary of the Crocodile River, which receives both mine water and municipal wastewater effluent and therefore bears the brunt of poor quality allogenic water inputs. The regional context is represented by the Hartbeespoort Dam catchment, which includes major drainages such as the Crocodile River to the south and its eastern tributaries the Jukskei and Hennops rivers, and the Magalies River and its southern tributary the Skeerpoort River to the west. Each of these drainages contribute to the quantity and quality of water impounded in the dam, and an analysis of their respective contributions therefore provides an informative measure of the temporal mine water impact in a regional context.

The result indicates that amongst other metrics, the total dissolved solids (TDS) load delivered by the Bloubank Spruit system in the last five hydrological years amounted to 11% of the total TDS load delivered to Hartbeespoort Dam in this period, ranking third behind the Jukskei River (49%) and the Hennops River (30%), and followed by the Magalies River (5%), Crocodile River (4%) and Skeerpoort River (1%). By comparison, the long-term record reflects changes only in the contributions of the impacted Bloubank Spruit (10%) and pristine Skeerpoort River (2%). The difference is attributed mainly to the intervention of Mother Nature.

Abstract

An understanding of the movement of moisture fluxes in the unsaturated zone of waste disposal sites play a critical role in terms of potential groundwater contamination. Increasing attention is being given to the unsaturated or vadose zone where much of the subsurface contamination originates, passes through, or can be eliminated before it contaminates surface and subsurface water resources. As the transport of contaminants is closely linked with the water ?ux in through the unsaturated zone, any quantitative analysis of contaminant transport must ?rst evaluate water ?uxes into and through the this region. Mathematical models have often been used as critical tools for the optimal quantification of site-speci?c subsurface water ?ow and solute transport processes so as to enable the implementation of management practices that minimize both surface and groundwater pollution. For instance, numerical models have been used in the simulation of water and solute movement in the subsurface for a variety of applications, including the characterization of unsaturated zone solute transport in waste disposal sites and landfills. In this study, HYDRUS 2D numerical simulation was used to simulate water and salt movement in the unsaturated zone at a dry coal ash disposal site in Mpumalanga, South Africa. The main objective of this work was to determine the flux dynamics within the unsaturated zone of the coal ash medium, so as to develop a conceptual model that explains solute transport through the unsaturated zone of the coal ash medium for a period of approximately 10 year intervals. Field experiments were carried out to determine the model input parameters and the initial conditions, through the determination of average moisture content, average bulk density and the saturated hydraulic conductivity of the medium. A two dimensional finite-element mesh of 100m x 45m model was used to represent cross section of the ash dump. Two dimensional time lapse models showing the migration of moisture fluxes and salt plumes were produced for the coal ash medium. An explanation on the variation of moisture content and cumulative fluxes in the ash dump was done with reference to preexisting ash dump data as well as the soil physical characteristics of the ash medium.
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Abstract

Cadmium is a highly mobile and bioavailable non-essential element that is toxic to plants, and is an animal and human carcinogen (affecting the kidneys and bones in vertebrates). Since the late-1970s the effects of cadmium on the environment have become a global issue of concern, and many countries have conducted evaluations on the exposure of their populations to cadmium in phosphate fertilizer (a major non-point source of anthropogenic cadmium). A scoping project, funded by the Water Research Commission, aimed to review cadmium contamination of South African aquifer groundwater systems (predominantly) via phosphate fertilizer use. Topics reviewed included fertilizer composition and types, metal speciation, metal mobility in soil and groundwater systems, metal bioavailability, health and environmental effects, and local South African contamination case studies. A preliminary study site, namely the greater Hermanus region, was identified for trace metal and groundwater quality studies (which incorporated urban and agricultural areas in various hydrogeological settings). Hermanus was selected due to: 1) the discovery of cadmium concentrations of 20 ?g/l (in comparison to the SANS 241-1:2011 cadmium limit of 3 ?g/l) in a golf estate irrigation borehole, during drilling and test-pumping of the borehole at the end of 2012

Abstract

At a regional scale, groundwater recharge is often calculated using surface water models. Precipitation and surface water runoff are easier to measure than groundwater recharge, and evapotranspiration can be estimated with relative accuracy using indirect methods. In modelling, surface water measurements can be used for calibration, and groundwater is the residual term in the water balance of the catchment. This can give a good indication of regional trends, but provides limited scope for the accommodation of groundwater system characteristics and recharge processes. Recently, much research has been focused on the interaction of surface and groundwater models. The coupling of physically based surface and ground water models allows for calibration of the model using both surface and groundwater data while providing scope for improved insight into the processes which define the interaction of groundwater with the rest of the water cycle. For example: stream discharge, interflow, preferential flow through the unsaturated zone and interaction with surface water retained in dams and wetlands. One such model is GSflow (United States Geological Survey), which we are applying to the Upper Vaal Catchment. This model integrates the surface water model PRMS (Precipitation-Runoff Modelling System) with MODFLOW (Modular Groundwater Flow model). The model is initially being calibrated at quaternary catchment scale, starting with the surface water components and later adding the groundwater system. The quaternary catchment is subdivided into smaller, topologically defined hydrological response units. This scaling allows for a better understanding of how well the characteristics of the units are represented in the physical processes incorporated into the model, so that ultimately the sensitivity analysis can incorporate these processes. The results will be compared to current work on recharge being carried out using GRACE data and previous work done in the same area. Once the entire model has been calibrated, there will be scope to calculate future scenarios, allowing for climate and land-use changes. A brief overview of existing work as well as methods and initial results and sensitivity analysis will be presented.

Abstract

Mining is becoming a problem in the Western Cape - different kinds of mining and other resources, different problems than in other parts of the country. The West Coast had been declared a development corridor and a mining priority area. It is an arid to semi-arid area, where surface water is scarce, and rainfall relatively low and decreasing as one moves north. Some areas have significant volumes of good quality groundwater available, with potential impacts by the mining activities. This would play the importance of different resources off against the other. Most see resources as minerals, such as gold, silver, phosphate, and others where the value of these resources is measurable. Resources are also human capital, time, water, air, a healthy environment. It is more difficult to measure the value of the second group, as some of them have more than just a Rand and cent value. The value of resources is mostly done by measuring its monetary value, i.e. how much you will get when you sell the resource to a customer, providing the way the value of most resources is measured, i.e. resource economics. Economics is an area that most scientists are not familiar with as it contains a way thinking, of rules and laws unrelated to the way they have been taught. Supply and demand determines the value of a commodity, with scarce resources normally fetching higher prices. The value of the second group of resources is more difficult to determine. When does a resource become a strategic resource? This would be a resource that has a limited supply, does not get regenerated through natural processes and that is needed for defence, energy supply and others important for the stability of a country. There are also a category of resources we cannot live without such as water, and air - pure, fresh air and water. Without it life on this planet will cease to exist. This could be termed critical resources. What do you do if the occurrence of two very important critical resources overlaps, where the extraction of the one will lead to irreparable damage to the other? This article will look at one site where a strategic resource occurs at the same site as an important water resource. It will compare the potential value of the mineral resource with the value of the water resource in the aquifer measured at the current value of water as available to the public. It will also take into account the value of the water resource from the perspective of a healthy functioning ecosystem and a RAMSAR site. This analysis becomes more valuable when considering the potential effects of climate change in the area and the cost of desalination.

Abstract

Globally, a growing concern have been that the heavy metal contents of soil are increasing as the result of industrial, mining, agricultural and domestic activities. While certain heavy metals are essential for plant growth as micronutrients, it may become toxic at higher concentrations. Additionally, as the toxic metals load of the soil increases, the risk of non-localized pollution due to the metals leaching into groundwater increases. The total soil metal content alone is not a good measure of risk, and thus not a very useful tool to determine potential risks to soil and water contamination. The tendency of a contaminant to seep into the groundwater is determined by its solubility and by the ratio between the concentration of the contaminant sorbed by the soil and the concentration remaining in solution. This ratio is commonly known as the soil partitioning or distribution coefficient (Kd). A higher Kd value indicate stronger attraction to the soil solids and lower susceptibility to leaching. Studies indicate that the Kd for a given constituent may vary widely depending on the nature of the soil in which the constituent occurs. The Kd of a soil represents the net effect of several soil sorption processes acting upon the contaminant under a certain set of conditions. Soil properties such as the pH, clay content, organic carbon content and the amount of Mn and Fe oxides, have an immense influence on the Kd value of a soil. Kds for Cu, Pb and V for various typical South African soil horizons were calculated from sorption graphs. In most cases there were contrasting Kd values especially when the cations, Cu and Pb, had high contamination levels, the value for V was low. There is large variation between the Kds stipulated in the Framework for the Management of Contaminated land (as drafted by the Department of Environmental Affairs) and the values obtained experimentally in this study. The results further indicate that a single Kd for an element/metal cannot be used for all soil types/horizons due to the effect of soil properties on the Kd. The results for Cu and Pb indicated that the Kds can range in the order of 10 to 10 000 L/kg for Cu and 10 to 100 000 L/kg for Pb. The variation in V Kd was not as extensive ranging from approximately 10 to 1 000 L/kg. {List only- not presented}

Abstract

Groundwater is used extensively in the Sandveld for the irrigation of potatoes. The groundwater resources are plentiful and of good enough quality for the production of potatoes, however there has been a significant increase in potato production especially from the period 1975 to 2008. The area planted has increased from 2 369 Ha to 6 715 Ha in this period. The rate of increase has reduced significantly since 2008 and is now quite consistent at approximately 6 800 ha/a. In the region groundwater is vital for the proper functioning of ecosystems and it is also the sole source of water for five towns in the area and supplies most of the domestic water for the farms in the area. Thus the abstraction of groundwater for agriculture needs to be carefully assessed to ensure impacts on other systems and users do not occur.

For this reason Potatoes South Africa has taken the responsible approach of investing in the on-going monitoring of groundwater levels (quantity) and groundwater quality in the Sandveld. PSA appointed the groundwater consultancy, GEOSS to do this monitoring and they have continually committed to this monitoring for the past 10 years. The long term monitoring data has been very valuable in that it shows groundwater trends and the spatial distribution of the measured parameters. Regarding the trends it is clear that certain areas are being over-abstracted and groundwater levels are dropping. In the more critical areas, intervention has occurred - boreholes were closed down and the points of abstraction distributed over a much wider area. This region (Lower Langvlei River) is showing clear signs of recovery both in terms of groundwater levels and quality. The other localized areas where negative trends are evident the land owners have been informed and are aware of the problems. In some critical areas continuous groundwater level loggers have been installed to monitor trends.

The long-term groundwater monitoring, has helped significantly in addressing the negative perception about the widespread impact on groundwater resources due to potato cultivation in the Sandveld. It is important the monitoring continues and regular feedback provided to land owners. The monitoring that the local municipality and the Department of Water Affairs do also needs to be integrated into a single database. It is evident that the initial abstraction of groundwater in the pioneer days of potato cultivation did impact groundwater resources and associated ecosystems in the Sandveld, however currently as the rate of expansion has reduced and stabilized, the groundwater resources closely mimic rainfall patterns and the areas that are being impact are localized, well known and being addressed.

Abstract

South Africa is a semi-arid country. Its average rainfall of roughly 464 mm/a is much lower than the world average of 860 mm/a. Due to a shortage of surface water, groundwater plays an important role in the water supply to domestic, industrial, agricultural and mining users. Groundwater exploration has become increasingly dependent on the use of geophysical techniques to gain insight into the subsurface conditions to minimise the risk of drilling unsuccessful production boreholes. Dolerite dykes and sills are often targeted during groundwater exploration programmes in Karoo rocks. Due to the high pressures and temperatures that reigned during the emplacement of these structures, the sedimentary host rocks along the margins of the intrusive structures are typically strongly altered. These altered zones are often heavily fractured and, as a result, have increased hydraulic conductivities as compared to the unaltered host rock. The altered zones often act as preferential pathways for groundwater migration, making them preferred targets during groundwater exploration.
In conjunction with magnetic methods, electromagnetic (EM) methods are the techniques most often used for groundwater exploration in Karoo rocks. In South Africa, the ground EM system most commonly used is the Geonics EM34-3 frequency-domain system. This system has already been in use for a few decades, yet a great deal of uncertainty still remains regarding the interpretation of anomalies recorded over geological structures associated with lateral changes in electrical conductivity. This uncertainty results from the fact that the Geonics EM34-3 system employs measurements of the out-of-phase components of the secondary magnetic field relative to the primary magnetic field to calculate an apparent conductivity for the subsurface. The apparent conductivity profiles across lateral changes in conductivity often do not make intuitive sense.
This project focuses on the development of guidelines for the interpretation of anomalies recorded with the EM34-3 system across intrusive structures of geohydrological significance in Karoo rocks. Geophysical surveys were conducted across known dykes and sills in an attempt to systematically investigate the responses recorded across these structures. Data from magnetic and two-dimensional electrical resistivity tomography surveys, as well as from geological borehole logs in some cases, were used as controls to assist in the interpretation.

Abstract

POSTER The areas studied in this paper are situated in semi-dry regions of Limpopo and Northern Cape Provinces of South Africa. Groundwater is the only dependable source of water for many local users and farming communities. The growing population is putting immense pressure in the current water resources, hence a need to find new groundwater resources. The areas are most dominated by fractured rock aquifers which accounts to over 90% of South African aquifers. Finding sustainable sources of groundwater in these regions is often a challenge due the complex nature of the fracturing network system of fractured aquifers. This study uses a supervised committee learning with artificial neutral network (SCLANN) model to improve the regional groundwater exploration in granitic basement terrains and valley controlled aquifers in metamorphic terrains of South Africa. The data used in the study was obtained from the national groundwater archive and interpretation of high resolution aeromagnetic data, ground surveys and remote sensing datasets. The artificial neural network (ANN), Fuzzy (F) and Neuro-fuzzy (NF) unsupervised models whose input were groundwater controlling parameters like regolith thickness, lithology, relief, faults, lineament density, lengths of lineaments was used. The results from the ANN, F and NF models were used as inputs to a nonlinear supervised SCLANN framework with the borehole yield as the training and validation outputs. Borehole yield was used as it is one of the measurable parameter that directly related to productivity of groundwater resources. The use of the unsupervised models improved the results significantly as the SCLANN model results as a combined advantage of the individual models to achieve the optimal high performance. The results show that the three models used to build a SCLANN model was able to improve the identification of potential groundwater targets at regional scales. This approach can be incorporated in regional groundwater exploration programs to improving drilling success rate on granitic basement and metamorphic terrains in South Africa. The results show that the SCLANN outperforms individual unsupervised models. However the SCLANN results for granitic basement terrains were far much better than the metamorphic terrains probably showing the limitation of the approach in metamorphic terrains.

Abstract

South Africa's water legislation of has often been deemed 'progressive', yet implementation of policies can be weak in terms of groundwater - a resource inherently more difficult to govern than surface water due to its invisibility, difficulties in mapping, the long timescales involved and its ties to land tenure. Furthermore, shallow, hard rock aquifers are frequently perceived as "self-controlling" by their users and thus not requiring active management. This view is however not optimal in areas with a large dependence on groundwater for livelihoods invoking the question what happens between the periods of over-abstraction and the recharge events that replenish them? There is a need for better management, particularly in light of climate variability when recharge episodes can be infrequent and drought can lead to extra calls on aquifers.

Seasonal climate forecasts have the potential to provide information to contribute to groundwater management strategies. This study focuses on the case of Dendron in Limpopo Province. Numerous consultancy reports have been released over the past few decades regarding the over-exploitation of groundwater due to the area's long history of potato cultivation via groundwater-irrigation. The primary aim of this study is to determine the potential contribution of seasonal forecast information in the Dendron area for agricultural groundwater management, given insights to the needs of commercial farmers in the area the dominant users of groundwater. We examine the effectiveness of formal and informal groundwater management strategies in the area and then consider current use of seasonal forecasts and their potential value for decision-making. We also highlight the need for a better understanding of the role of seasonal climate variability in groundwater systems to understand their potential as climate buffers during periods of drought. Insights will be drawn from interviews with farmers and representatives from the Department of Water and Sanitation, and a needs-analysis workshop with the farming community. Constraints and barriers to uptake are also investigated, looking at factors such as data quality and availability, timing of forecasts, perceptions of forecasts, and their communication.

Abstract

The Oudtshoorn Groundwater Project aims to target deep groundwater as a long-term option to augment the water supply to the greater Oudtshoorn Local Municipality. Located 15 km south of Oudtshoorn towards the Outeniqua Mountain range, the Blossoms Wellfield lies within a potentially high-yielding artesian basin. The Peninsula Formation (of the Table Mountain Group (TMG), hydrostratigraphically known as the Peninsula Aquifer, is exposed in the Outeniqua Mountains (high rainfall recharge area), and is deeply confined northwards by the overlying Bokkeveld Group.
The project is currently emerging from an exploration phase, with eight existing boreholes that target the deep confined Peninsula Aquifer, and three boreholes that monitor the shallower Nardouw (Skurweberg) Aquifer. Estimation of the aquifer's productive and sustainable groundwater potential involves determining its hydraulic properties by stressing the aquifer through flow and pumping tests and accurately monitoring flow rates, the potentiometric surface level (PSL) during flow, and PSL recovery thereafter. Free-flow and pumping tests were carried out on four boreholes between the 12th May 2014 and the 29th June 2014. The boreholes were all equipped with data-loggers to record pressure and flow-meters to determine the flow-rate. Recovery of the aquifer after the testing is still being continuously monitored.
Results from the month and a half flow-test show that there is no interaction between the deep confined Peninsula Aquifer and the shallower Nardouw Aquifer beneath the southern part of the wellfield. Because the water-use licence stipulates that there can be no negative impact from Peninsula Aquifer abstraction on the Nardouw Aquifer, which is utilised by farmers in the region, this issue is of paramount importance. The hydrochemical signature of the two aquifers is also different.
Recovery monitoring emphasised that the northern block is better inter-connected through fracture systems than the southern block, because those boreholes recovered to their original potentiometric surface almost immediately, whereas the southern boreholes took days for recovery. Two boreholes in the south are still recovering eight months later, which is most likely due to their being drilled into the limb of folded rock systems and not the more fractured hinge zone (as with the more connected boreholes).
Using the drawdown and recovery curves ('Horner plots'), the transmissivity and storativity of the aquifer is calculated analytically by the Theis equation. The results show a large variation in storativity (1.0E-1 to 1.46E-4) and transmissivity (9-20 m2/day) between the various boreholes, emphasising the heterogeneity of the aquifer. The aquifer properties gained from this testing are essential in better understanding the aquifer system, and developing numerical models for future wellfield testing and model simulation.

Abstract

Multi-data integration approach was used to assess groundwater potential in an area consisting crystalline basement and carbonate rocks that are located in the North West Province of South Africa. The main objective of the study is to evaluate the groundwater resource potential of the region based on a thorough analysis of existing data combined with field observation. Integration of six thematic layers was supplemented by a statistical analysis of the relationship between lineaments density and borehole yield. Prior to data integration, weighting coefficients were computed using principal component analysis.
The resulting thematic layer derived from integration of the six layers revealed a number of groundwater potential zones. The most probable groundwater potential zones cover ~14% of the entire study area and located within carbonate rocks consisting limestone and dolomite. The presence of pre-existing structures together with younger and coarse sedimentary rocks deposited atop the carbonate rocks played a significant role in the development of high well fields in the southern part of the area. Moderate-to-high groundwater potential zones within Ventersdorp lava coincide with maximum concentrations of fractures. The results of statistical correlation suggest that 62% of high borehole yield within the Ventersdorp lave can be attributed to fracture density. In general, the present approach is very effective in delineating potential targets and can be used as a sound scientific basis for further detailed groundwater investigation.
KEY WORDS:- Multi-data, thematic layers, groundwater, carbonate rocks, structures

Abstract

POSTER Vanwyksvlei had always experienced problems with water supply and quality of drinking water. The town relies on 6 boreholes to supply the town with drinking water. Since 2011 the town was told not to use the water that was supplied from the borehole called Soutgat. This meant that the town could now rely only on the water being supplied from the other 5 boreholes.From 2011 till present the town has experienced a lot of problems regarding water supply, due to the fact that the Soutgat could not be used anymore. Extra stress was put on the other boreholes and these were pumped almost dry. The two aquifers are currently failing and monitoring data since 2009 shows that the water levels of the town are decreasing. Due to low rainfall, recharge to the boreholes are much lower, which exacerbates the problem. This poster will examine the effectiveness of using the Blue Drop system in small towns with limited water supply, at the hand of a case study of Vanwyksvlei. This review will take into account factors such as the point at which water quality is tested in the water supply system, the type of water treatment available for the town and a review the usefulness of certain standards in the Blue Drop system which may indicate failure of supply sources.

Abstract

Data acquisition and Management (DAM) is a group of activities relating to the planning, development, implementation and administration of systems for the acquisition, storage, security, retrieval, dissemination, archiving and disposal of data. Data is the life blood of an organization and the Department of Water and Sanitation (DWS) is mandated by the National Water Act (No 36 of 1998) as well as the Water Services Act (No 108 of 1997), to provide useful water related information to decision makers in a timely and efficient manner. In 2009 the DWS National Water Monitoring Committee (NWMC) established the DAM as its subcommittee. The purpose was to ensure coordination and collaboration in the acquisition and management of water related data in support of water monitoring programs. The DAM subcommittee has relatively been inactive over the years and this has led to many unresolved data issues. The data extracted from the DWS Data Acquisition and Management Systems (DAMS) is usually not stored in the same formats. As a result, most of the data is fragmented, disintegrated and not easily accessible, making it inefficient for water managers to use the data to make water related decisions. The lack of standardization of data collection, storage, archiving and dissemination methods as well as insufficient collaboration with external institutions in terms of data sharing, negatively affects the management water resources. Therefore, there is an urgent need to establish and implement a DAM Strategy for the DWS and water sector, in order to maintain and improve data quality, accuracy, availability, accessibility and security. The proposed DAM Strategy is composed of the six main implementation phases, viz. (1) Identification of stakeholders and role players as well as their roles and responsibilities in the DWS DAM. (2) Definition of the role of DAM in the data and information management value chain for the DWS. (3) Development of a strategy for communication of data needs and issues. (4) Development of a DAM life Cycle (DAMLC). (5) Review of existing DAMS in the DWS. (6) Review of current data quality standards. The proposed DAM Strategy is currently being implemented on the DWS Groundwater DAM. The purpose of this paper is to share the interesting results obtained thus far, and to seek feedback from the water sector community.

Abstract

The way in which groundwater is utilized and managed in South Africa is currently being reconsidered, and injection wells offer numerous possibilities for the storage, disposal and abstraction of the groundwater resource for municipalities, rural communities, mining, oil and gas, and a multitude of other industries. This presentation is about the North Lee County Reverse Osmosis Water Treatment Plant Injection Deep Injection Well project in southwest Florida in the United States. Water is plentiful in Florida, but it is not drinking water quality when it comes out of the ground. As such, treating water from wells is an important part of water supply in the coastal regions of the state. One form of treatment is reverse osmosis (RO), which generates a brine concentrate waste. The concentrate must then be disposed of, and a preferred method of disposal is an injection well because the disposal is not visible to the general public. The injection well project was associated with the construction of a large water treatment plant. The emphasis of this presentation is on the drilling and technical work in the field for this injection well, and to illustrate the rigorous requirements of drilling, constructing and testing a Class I injection well. Class I injection wells are permitted by the United States Environmental Protection Agency (US EPA) for injecting hazardous waste, industrial non-hazardous liquid, and/or municipal wastewater beneath the lowermost Underground Source of Drinking Water (USDW). Aquifer storage and recovery (ASR) wells are permitted as Class V injection wells by the US EPA. The permitting of an injection well is rigorous and requires state and federal approval before, during and after the field portion of the project. {List only- not presented}

Abstract

Groundwater provides an important buffer to climate variability in Africa. Yet, groundwater irrigation contributes only a relatively small share of cultivated land, approximately 1% (about 2 mill. ha) as compared to 14% in Asia. While groundwater is over-exploited for irrigation in many parts in Asia, previous assessments indicate an underutilized potential in parts of Africa. As opposed to previous country-based estimates, this paper derives a continent-wide, distributed (0.5 degrees spatial resolution) map of groundwater irrigation potential, indicated in terms of fractions of cropland potentially irrigable with renewable groundwater. The method builds on an annual groundwater balance approach using 41 years of hydrological data, allocating only that fraction of groundwater recharge that is in excess after satisfying other present human needs and environmental requirements, while disregarding socio-economic and physical constraints in access to the resource. Due to high uncertainty of groundwater environmental needs, three scenarios, leaving 30, 50 and 70% of recharge for the environment, were implemented. Current dominating crops and cropping rotations and associated irrigation requirements in a zonal approach were applied in order to convert recharge excess to potential irrigated cropland. Results show an inhomogeneously distributed groundwater irrigation potential across the continent, even within individual countries, mainly reflecting recharge patterns and presence or absence of cultivated cropland. Results further show that average annual renewable groundwater availability for irrigation ranges from 692 to 1644 km3 depending on scenario. The total area of cropland irrigable with renewable groundwater ranges from 44.6 to 105.3 mill. ha, corresponding to 20.5 to 48.6% of the cropland over the continent. In particular, significant potential exists in the semiarid Sahel and eastern African regions which could support poverty alleviation if developed sustainably and equitably. The map is a first assessment that needs to be complimented with assessment of other factors, e.g. hydrogeological conditions, groundwater accessibility, soils, and socio-economic factors as well as more local assessments.

Abstract

Natural attenuation describes a set of natural processes which decrease the concentrations and/or mobility of contaminants without human intervention. In order to evaluate and demonstrate the effectiveness of natural attenuation, regular long term monitoring must be implemented. This entire process is called Monitored natural attenuation (MNA). The focus of MNA is generally placed on hydrocarbons and chlorinated solvents but according to the United States Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) MNA can be used for various metals, radio nuclides and other inorganic contaminants. MNA was deemed the best method to reduce the concentration and mobility of contaminants impacting the groundwater environment, at a fertiliser plant in the Free State. A number of improvements in infrastructure were made in 2013which were assumed to have prevented further release of contaminants into the groundwater system, from the source areas on site. MNA was also considered to be the most effective affordable solution for the site as groundwater in the vicinity is not used for domestic purposes (low risk). Cl, NO3 and NH4 were used to monitor the movement of the contamination off site and the effectiveness of MNA. With regards to the inorganic contaminants emanating from the site, sorption, dispersion, dilution, and volatilization are the main attenuation mechanisms. These mechanisms are considered to be non-destructive attenuation mechanisms. Denitrification, nitrate reduction through microbial processes, may also facilitate in the attenuation of the in organic constituent nitrate. Denitrification is considered a destructive mechanism. Classed posts and temporal graphs of the Cl, NO3 and NH4 concentrations between 2008 and 2014 were utilised to show the movement and change in size and shape of the contamination plumes and subsequently, monitor MNA. The data indicates that the NO3, Cl and NH4 contamination plumes from the various source areas on the site have detached from the site and are currently moving down gradient along the natural drainage. Contaminant concentrations at the site have generally decreased in recent monitoring events while concentrations downstream of the site have remained stable. This indicates that MNA is currently an effective method of remediation for the site and monitoring should be continued to ensure that it remains effective.

Abstract

The mountain catchments of the Western Cape winter rainfall area were identified as areas needing more study in the early 1960s and so the Mountain Catchment studies were born. A number of study areas were suggested for these studies, but it was finally narrowed down to three sites. The studies in Jonkershoek had already started in 1935, with Zachariashoek and Jakkalsrivier added on in the 1960s. The Zachariashoek site was the only one that included groundwater as part of the experimental setup. A number of publications had been written about the work done in Zachariashoek. Most of the publications focused on changes in runoff after deforestation and fires, as well as the recovery patterns of the vegetation. The studies in Zachariashoek were done from 1964 till its termination in 1991 because of a lack of funding. The groundwater component consisted of 14 boreholes, with recorders on the five boreholes near the five weirs. The Zachariashoek area is made up of three catchments, Zachariashoek, Bakkerskloof and Kasteelkloof. It is adjacent to the Wemmershoek catchment. Bakkerskloof was the control catchment, while different burn cycles were part of the experimental setup of the two other catchments. The vegetation of Kasteelkloof was burned every 6 years with a 12 year cycle for Zachariashoek. Monitoring of the 5 weirs, 14 boreholes and the 9 rain gauges was done every week, with recorders on all five weirs, five of the 14 boreholes and at least 4 of the rain gauges. This data was entered into the data bases of the Department of Water and Sanitation, stretching from 1964 to 1986, with a complete record contained in 10 small field books. In this publication, we will look at the experiments done in Zachariashoek to see how this long term monitoring data can assist in managing the water resources within a catchment, taking into account the effects of deforestation and fires on surface water, groundwater and recharge to groundwater, the interaction between groundwater and surface water, as well as climate change.

Abstract

POSTER The poster presents the modified hydrogeologic conceptual model that was used to assess the dynamics of groundwater flooding in Cape Flat Aquifer (CFA). The groundwater flooding remains poorly understood in the context of urban hydrogeology of the developing countries such as South Africa. While engineering intervention are relevant to providing solution to such events, continue estimation of hydrogeologic parameters at local scale alongside field measurements remain paramount to plausible modeling the groundwater flooding scenarios that inform such engineering interventions. However, hydrogeologic conceptual model which informs numerical simulation has not been modified to include local scale variation in the CFA to reflect various groundwater units. The current study argues that modifying hydrogeologic conceptual model improves numerical simulations thereby enhancing certainty for engineering solutions. The current study developed groundwater units, set up site specific models and estimated aquifer parameters using pumping step-drawdown and constant rate pumping tests in order to produce a comprehensive modified hydrogeological conceptual model for CFA to inform groundwater modeling at catchment level for water sensitive cities.

Key Words: Aquifer parameters, Groundwater flooding, specific models, hydrogeologic conceptual model, groundwater units, numerical simulations, water sensitive cities, CFA