Conference Abstracts

All Abstracts were presented at the Groundwater Conferences

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Abstract

Water stewardship is achieved through a stakeholder’s inclusive process. It aims to guarantee long-term water security for all uses, including nature. Various actions can occur in the watershed’s recharge area, such as land cover restoration and artificial recharges. To measure the effectiveness of these actions, it is crucial to quantify their impact on water and communities. The common method for assessing the benefits of water stewardship activities is the volumetric water benefit accounting (VWBA) method. It allows for comparing the positive impact on water to the extracted groundwater volume for operations. We present the validation of the Positive Water Impact of DANONE Aqua operation at the Lido Site in West Java, Indonesia, within the VWBA framework. Different methods were used to evaluate three main water impact activities: (1) land cover restoration with reforestation, (2) artificial recharge with infiltration trenches and wells, and (3) water access. The curve number of the SWAT model was used to measure the reduced runoff impact of the land conservation action. The water table fluctuation method was employed to assess artificial recharge volume. The volume of pump discharge rates was used for water access. Results highlight the water impact at the Lido site, with the volumetric accounting of the three main activities. The discrepancy in the final calculation can be related to the variation in the field’s validated activities. VWBA framework is useful to validate water stewardship activities’ impact and plan further impactful actions.

Abstract

The Atlantis Water Resource Management Scheme (AWRMS) has operated since the 1970s. It demonstrates cost-effective and wise water use and recycling through visionary town planning and Managed Aquifer Recharge (MAR), offering water security to Atlantis’s residential and industrial sectors. For the AWRMS to succeed, it required integrating its water supply, wastewater and stormwater systems. Each of these water systems is complex and requires a multidisciplinary management approach. Adding to the challenges of inter-departmental co-operation and communication within a municipal system is the complexity and vulnerability of the coastal, primary Atlantis Aquifer. A combination of operational difficulties, biofouling, vandalism and readily available surplus surface water (leading to scheme augmentation from surface water) were negative drivers to decrease the reliance on groundwater supply from the scheme’s two wellfields. In response to the 2015-2018 drought experienced in the Western Cape of South Africa, the City of Cape Town has improved assurance of supply from the scheme and successfully built resilience by upgrading knowledge and insight through improved investigative techniques, monitoring, modelling and adaptive management of the various water resources and associated infrastructure systems. An integrated and adaptive management approach is essential to ensure continued water security and resilience to the effects of on-going urban expansion, population growth and climate change. Resilience is assured by institutions, individuals and communities taking timely and appropriate decisions, while the long-term sustainability of the AWRMS depends on proper management of all actors coupled with a high level of scientific confidence.

Abstract

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

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

Abstract

The current understanding of groundwater within the larger Bushveld Complex (BC) is evaluated to gauge the potential for deep groundwater, specifically emphasising the lesser investigated eastern limb. From the review of publicly available literature and data, geohydrological databases and statistical analyses are presented as a collation of the current understanding of groundwater in the eastern limb of the BC. Unfortunately, information on deep groundwater (> 300 m) is scarce due to the cost associated with deep drilling, mining exploration holes often neglecting hydrogeological data collection, or lack of public access to this information. Nevertheless, the conceptual model developed from the available information highlights deep groundwater’s variable and structurally controlled nature and the uncertainty associated with groundwater characterisation of the deeper groundwater systems. This uncertainty supports the need for research-based scientific drilling of the deeper fractured lithologies in the eastern limb of the Bushveld Complex. The Bushveld Complex Drilling Project (BVDP) established an opportunity to perform such research-based drilling and was funded by the International Continental Scientific Drilling Program (ICDP). While the main focus of the BVDP is to produce a continuous vertical stratigraphic sequence of the BC, there is a sub-component to collect geohydrological information. The planned borehole, 2 500 m deep, will provide an opportunity to collect information from the deeper systems within the Bushveld Complex and the underlying Transvaal Supergroup, which will inform on the connection between shallow and deeper groundwater.

Abstract

Knowledge of the nature and extent of groundwater-dependent ecosystems (GDE) at an aquifer scale enables incorporating ecological water requirements in integrated groundwater resource management activities, including transboundary aquifer cases (TBA). This way, sustainable groundwater management and functional ecosystem services can be achieved. Therefore, understanding groundwater- ecosystems-surface water interactions is crucial for assessing resources’ resilience or susceptibility towards certain impacts. Unfortunately, this subject is widely under-researched with fragmented information, especially in southern Africa. This study was thus initiated to understand groundwater processes controlling the maintenance of Tuli-Karoo TBA (Botswana, South Africa, Zimbabwe) GDEs towards developing a model that can be utilised in impact assessments, especially in climate change. The employed approach included stable isotope analysis (mainly 2 H and 18O) for groundwater, streams, springs, rainwater, vegetation, and soil; spatial imagery and GIS classification (incl. NDVI, NDRE, NDWI); and plant moisture stress techniques. Identified GDEs in the study area (characterized by intergranular alluvium aquifer underlain by the Karoo sandstone of intergranular and fractured secondary aquifer type) are riparian vegetation, floodplain and depression wetlands, and springs. Precipitation recharged alluvium aquifer’s contribution to Limpopo River baseflow is negligible as the discharge is mainly through springs and evapotranspiration. Monitoring data scarcity and skewed availability among sharing countries hamper research and its output applicability to TBA’s entirety. Therefore, data generation, exchange, and joint databases development are crucial for sustainable comanagement of groundwater and supported ecosystems and science-based decision-making.

Abstract

Due to technical, social, and economic limitations, integrated groundwater management presents a significant challenge in developing countries. The significance of this issue becomes even more pronounced in groundwater management, as this resource is often overlooked and undervalued by decision-makers due to its status as a “hidden resource,” despite the fact that it provides multiple ecosystem services. This study aims to establish the technical hydrogeological foundation in rural basins of central Bolivia through alternative, simplified, and cost-effective methods and tools. The study includes applying geophysical techniques, such as Electrical Resistivity Tomography, to determine the conceptual hydrogeological model of a micro-basin. In addition, a soil water balance approach was applied, characterizing 24 biophysical variables to identify groundwater recharge zones, while global circulation models provided a substitute for unreliable meteorological data. Furthermore, a participatory model was developed to identify recharge areas in upper basin areas within the framework of developing a municipal policy for their protection. The participatory model included local knowledge in all stages of methodology development, considering the characteristics of the local plant communities and the spatial distribution of local rainfall. The research findings have already contributed to resolving socio-environmental conflicts in Bolivia and establishing a foundation for effective water governance by empowering local rural communities. This study has demonstrated the feasibility of using alternative, simplified, and low-cost methods and tools to establish the technical hydrogeological basis, which can inform public policies to promote sustainable groundwater management in developing countries.

Abstract

Urban karst terrains can experience geotechnical issues such as subsidence or collapse induced/accelerated by groundwater withdrawal and civil works. Sete Lagoas, Brazil, is notable for overexploiting a karst aquifer, resulting in drying lakes and geotechnical issues. This study aims to evaluate the progression of geotechnical risk areas from 1940 to 2020 and to simulate future scenarios until 2100. Historical hydraulic head data from the 1940s (when the first pumping well was installed) to the 2000s, a 3D geological model, and a karst-geotechnical risk matrix for defining risk levels were employed to develop a calibrated Feflow numerical model. The results indicate that, before the first well in 1942, the groundwater flow direction was primarily towards the northeast. In the 1980s, due to the concentration of pumping wells in the central area, a cone of depression emerged, causing the flow directions to converge towards the centre of the cone, forming a zone of influence (ZOI) of approximately 30 km². All 20 geotechnical events recorded between 1940 and 2020 have occurred in high or considerable-risk zones where limestone outcrops or is mantled in association with the ZOI. For future scenarios, if the current global well pumping rate (Q = 144,675 m³/d) from 2020 remains constant until 2100, the high and considerable geotechnical risk zones will continue to expand. A 40% decrease in the global rate (Q = 85,200 m³/d) is necessary to achieve a sustainable state, defined by reduced and stabilized risk zones.

Abstract

In response to the Western Cape’s worst drought experienced during 2015-2018, the City of Cape Town implemented various projects to augment its water supply, including desalination, re-use and groundwater. The Cape Flats Aquifer Management Scheme (CFAMS) forms one of the groundwater projects that includes groundwater abstraction and managed aquifer recharge (MAR). The Cape Flats Aquifer (CFA) is a coastal, unconfined, primary aquifer within an urban and peri-urban environment. As such, it is well situated to take advantage of enhanced recharge using high-quality advanced treated effluent but also has challenges related to seawater intrusion (SWI) and risk of contamination. MAR is currently being tested and implemented with a three-fold purpose: (1) to create hydraulic barriers against seawater intrusion and other contamination sources, (2) to protect groundwater-dependent ecosystems harbouring biodiversity, and (3) to increase storage and improve water quality to enhance resilience to effects of drought. As no legislation for MAR exists in South Africa, international guidelines are used to determine water quality requirements related to clogging environmental and health concerns. Further consideration includes aquifer-scale design, the interaction of multiple abstraction and injection wellfields within an area, and the design of individual boreholes to enhance yield and limit clogging. We aim to present progress made to date that includes exploration, wellfield development, monitoring, numerical modelling, aquifer protection, and the lessons learnt.

Abstract

The Guarani Aquifer System (SAG) is the main public water supply source in Bauru City (Brazil). It mostly consists of sandstones and is a confined unit of fossil waters (~600 thousand years); therefore, it is a non-renewable and finite resource. SAG is overlaid by the Bauru Aquifer System (SAB), predominantly consisting of sandstones, siltstones, and mudstones, and is essential for private water supply in the municipality. In recent decades, constant drops in water levels in SAG and increases in contaminant loads in SAB have been observed in production wells, generating the need to understand the geometry of those aquifer systems.

This work presents the preliminary results of the analysis and review of hydrogeological and geophysical data from 59 deep wells and 3D geological modelling using Leapfrog Works® to represent a conceptual model of the study area. SAG has a thickness of up to 356 m in the wells and is represented, from bottom to top, by Teresina, Piramboia, and Botucatu formations. In the north and northeast regions, SAG is covered by a layer of basalts from the Serra Geral Aquifer System (SASG) with a thickness of up to 190 m. The thickness of SASG is variable (or even null) due to the action of important faults with vertical displacements that created structural windows in the region. SAB covers the Araçatuba (basal portion), Adamantina (144 m), and Marília (65 m) formations. The lower contact of SAB is made with SASG or SAG (central region). Project funded by FAPESP (2020/15434-0).

Abstract

The Netherlands produces about 2/3 of drinking water from groundwater. Although there is seemingly abundant groundwater, the resource needs to be carefully managed and used wisely to safeguard the resource for future generations and in case of disasters whilst also preventing negative impacts from groundwater extraction on other sectors such as nature. Provincial governments are responsible for the protection of existing groundwater abstractions for water supply against pollution. To secure groundwater resources for the future, two additional policy levels have been introduced: Provincial governments have been made responsible for mapping and protecting Additional Strategic Reserves. These allow for additional groundwater abstractions to meet growing demands in coming decades (horizon 2040/2050). The National Government is responsible for mapping and protecting the National Groundwater Reserves (NGRs) as a third level of resource protection. NGRs serve multiple goals: to protect natural groundwater capital for future generations, to provide reserves for large-scale disasters affecting water supply and to provide reserves for possible use as structural water supply in the far future (horizon 2100 and beyond). NGRs are being delineated in 3D using detailed existing geological models and the Netherlands’ national (fresh-saline) hydrological model. The dynamics of the groundwater system are analysed through scenario analyses. Reserves for potential structural use are selected such that negative impacts on nature are prevented if future abstractions are to be realised. The policies being developed must balance interests of water supply against other sectoral interests such as the green-energy transition with increased use of geothermal energy and aquifer-thermal-energy-storage.

Abstract

Conjunctive use of surface water and groundwater plays a pivotal role in sustainably managing water resources. An increase in population, especially in the cities, increases the demand for water supply. Additional infrastructure to meet the needs and treatment techniques to remove the pollutants should be updated from time to time. Closing the urban water cycle by recycling and reusing treated sewage in the water sector can significantly reduce excessive groundwater extraction. However, this method is being implemented in only a few cities in developed countries. In the closed urban water cycle, treated sewage is discharged to rivers or other surface water bodies and used for managed aquifer recharge (MAR). Bank filtration, soil aquifer treatment and infiltration ponds are available MAR methods that augment the groundwater resources and remove pollutants during the natural infiltration process. These cost-effective natural treatment methods serve as a pre-treatment technique before public water supply to remove turbidity, algal toxins, bulk dissolved organic carbon and pathogenic microorganisms. The successful performance of these treatment methods depends on the need and feasibility for MAR, suitable hydrogeological conditions, sub-surface storage capacity of the aquifers, availability of suitable areas for MAR, type of MAR, source of recharge water, quality criteria, assessing the past, present and future climatic conditions. Case studies on groundwater resources management and water quality assessment, including for organic micropollutants from a large urban catchment in India, are presented.

Abstract

Advances in groundwater age dating provide key information for groundwater recharge history and rates, which is of great significance for groundwater sustainable development and management. By far the, radioisotope 14C is the most frequently used in routine investigations. However, groundwater age can be misinterpreted given its dating range of up to 40 ka and its chemically active in nature. In comparison, 81Kr is less frequently used but chemically inert with a dating range of up to 1,300 ka, which overcomes the limit of 14C. Although it is not as precise as 14C when the groundwater age is younger than 40 ka, it may be helpful to determine the reliability of 14C dating results. In this study, we collected eight field samples from coastal aquifers in Nantong, China and analyzed them for 81Kr, 85Kr, and 14C. The 14C results show that all groundwater ages range from 2,400 to 35,300 years, with different correction methods yielding uncertainties of 1,500 to 3,300 years. Four of the 81Kr ages provided upper bounds, while three yielded groundwater ages which are consistent with the 14C dating results within measurement uncertainties. Interestingly, one 81Kr result gave an age of 189+11 - 12ka, whereas the corresponding corrected 14C age was less than 29,200 years. The great difference may indicate modern contamination in the sampling process or mixing between young and old groundwaters. Further investigation is needed to shed more lights in this case. Moreover, it shows the benefits of introducing 81Kr in routine hydrogeological investigations and the groundwater studies.

Abstract

Natural processes (e.g., El Nio) and anthropogenic activities (e.g., land-use modification and groundwater abstraction) drive local and global hydrological changes. Consequently, these changes threaten the role of wetlands in the hydrological and ecological functioning of a catchment. Verlorenvlei is a vulnerable RAMSAR-listed estuarine lake located on the west coast of South Africa in Elands Bay. Since the 2015-2018 Western Cape drought, Verlorenvlei has experienced drier-than-normal conditions with less rainfall, negatively impacting the surrounding ecology. Seasonal and spatial changes of the water sources (e.g., rainfall, surface water, and groundwater) supporting the wetland and the interconnectivity between these reservoirs were investigated using O/H stable isotopes and hydrochemistry analysis. The study collected event-based rainfall (57 samples), surface water (18 samples), and groundwater (108 samples) in February, April, and June 2022. Stable isotope ratios and hydrochemistry indicate that groundwater outside the watershed (topographically and surface water delineated) supports the wetlands, suggesting that local and regional groundwater flow systems influence the Verlorenvlei. Furthermore, the Verlorenvlei is subjected to high evaporation compared to other surface waters and, in return, is reliant on baseflow supporting its hydrological functioning. The Krom Antonies and Hol sub-catchments exhibit overlapping groundwater isotope ratios and water types compared to the Verloren sub-catchment, suggesting a disproportionately high groundwater contribution from both sub-catchments into the wetland. Understanding Verlorenvlei’s water balance is necessary to improve ecological reserve determination studies to help ensure environmental and socio-economic sustainable water use

Abstract

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

Abstract

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

Abstract

 Predicting and quantifying the hydrogeological interference of big underground works is a complex effort. This is due to the considerable uncertainty in estimating the key geomechanical and hydrogeological parameters affecting the area of potential interference of the projects. Moreover, the pattern of involved groundwater flow systems is hardly identified, either in natural or disturbed conditions. Base tunnels through mountain ridges are particularly complex in their interactions with groundwater. Several approaches and tools have been published to predict the magnitude and distribution of water inflows inside tunnels and their impact on many receptors (springs, rivers, lakes, wells, groundwater-dependent ecosystems). The research, co-funded by Italferr Spa (Italian railway national company for tunnel design), deals with calibrating and validating these methods based on huge datasets. Main engineering companies provided data from completed base tunnel projects. In particular, in this study, the Drawdown Hazard Index (DHI) method has been calibrated with a dataset of a 15 km long sector of the Gotthard base tunnel drilled through a crystalline geological setting. The calibration involved only the Potential Inflow (PI) parameter to verify the matching between the probability of inflow and the actual output of the excavation, according to the available data in the preliminary stage of the project. An alternative tool based on a machine-learning approach was then applied to the same dataset, and a comparison was presented.

Abstract

The long mining history in Namibia has resulted in numerous abandoned mines scattered throughout the country. Past research around the Klein Aub abandoned Copper mine highlighted environmental concerns related to past mining. Considering that residents of Klein Aub depend solely on groundwater, there is a need to thoroughly investigate groundwater quality in the area to ascertain the extent of the contamination. This study made considerable effort to characterise groundwater quality using a comprehensive approach of quality assessment and geostatistical analysis. Onsite parameters reveal that pH ranges between 6.82-7.8, electrical conductivity ranges between 678 - 2270 μS/cm, and dissolved oxygen ranges between 1.4 -5.77 mg/L. With an exemption of two samples, the onsite parameters indicate that water is of excellent quality according to the Namibian guidelines. The stable isotopic composition ranges from −7.26 to -5.82‰ and −45.1 to -35.9‰ for δ18O and δ2H, respectively—the groundwater plots on and above the Global Meteoric Water Line, implying no evaporation effect. Hydrochemical analyses show bicarbonate and chloride as dominant anions, while calcium and sodium are dominant cations, indicating groundwater dissolving halite and mixing with water from a recharge zone.

The heavy metal pollution index of the groundwater is far below the threshold value of 100, which signals pollution; it contrasts the heavy metal evaluation index, which clustered around 3, implying that the heavy metals moderately affected groundwater. Copper, lead and Arsenic were the main contributors to the values of the indices.

Abstract

There is an urgent need to support the sustainable development of groundwater resources, which are under increasing pressure from competing uses of subsurface geo-resources, compounded by land use and climate change impacts. Management of groundwater resources is crucial for enabling the green transition and attaining the Sustainable Development Goals. The United Nations Framework Classification for Resources (UNFC) is a project-based classification system for defining the environmental-socio-economic viability and technical feasibility of projects to develop resources and recently extended for groundwater. UNFC provides a consistent framework to describe the level of confidence in groundwater resources by the project and is designed to meet the needs of applications pertaining to (i) Policy formulation based on geo-resource studies, (ii) Geo-resource management functions, (iii) Business processes; and (iv) Financial capital allocation. To extend use in groundwater resources management, supplemental specifications have been developed for the UNFC that provide technical guidance to the community of groundwater professionals to enhance sustainable resource management based on improved decision-making. This includes addressing barriers to sustainably exploiting groundwater resources, avoiding lack of access to water and also related to ‘common pool resources’ in which multiple allocations are competing with domestic water supply (e.g. geo-energy, minerals, agriculture and ecosystems, and transboundary allocation of natural resources). UNFC for groundwater resources is designed to enhance governance to protect the environment and traditional users while ensuring socio-economic benefits to society. Consequently, it is a valid and promising tool for assessing both the sustainability and feasibility of groundwater management at local, national and international levels.

Abstract

Water scarcity has driven many countries in arid regions, such as Oman, to desalinate seawater for freshwater supply. Episodic problems with seawater quality (e.g., harmful algae), extreme weather events that affect energy supply and hence the desalination process have nurtured the urgent need to store desalinated seawater (DSW) in the aquifers for use during emergency and peak demand time. Aquifer Storage and Recovery (ASR) using injection wells is a possible strategic option for Oman Water and Wastewater Services Company (OWWSC) to augment aquifer storage using excess desalinated water during low demand times. ASR strategically serves as a water supply backup to optimize production capacities against seasonal demand patterns. The technical-economic feasibility of implementing ASR schemes was investigated in Jaalan, Oman, using hydrogeological and geophysical field measurements, groundwater flow and hydraulic modelling, and economic analysis. Analysis of modelled scenarios results revealed that the Jaalan aquifer is suitable for storing and recovering about 4,000 m3 /hr in 2045. Various well field designs have been tested and optimized numerically using MODFLOW 6, showing that with 160 dual-purpose wells, 7.9 Mm3 can be injected and abstracted within the constraints defined for a robust and sustainable ASR system. Simulations with the density-dependent flow model (MF6 BUY) show that the injected volume can be fully recovered considering the drinking water quality standard. Other sites were also studied. ASR capacity was found to be site-specific, and the groundwater developments near the ASR site governed its feasibility

Abstract

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

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

Abstract

Managed aquifer recharge (MAR) has become increasingly popular in Central Europe as a sustainable, clean, and efficient method for managing domestic water supply. In these schemes, river water is artificially infiltrated into shallow aquifers for storage and natural purification of domestic water supply, while the resulting groundwater mound can simultaneously be designed to suppress the inflow of regional groundwater from contaminated areas. MAR schemes are typically not managed based on automated optimization algorithms, especially in complex urban and geological settings. However, such automated managing procedures are critical to guarantee safe drinking water. With (seasonal) water scarcity predicted to increase in Central Europe, improving the efficiency of MAR schemes will contribute to achieving several of the UN SDGs and EU agendas. Physico-chemical and isotope data has been collected over the last 3-4 decades around Switzerland’s largest MAR scheme in Basel, Switzerland, where 100 km3 /d of Rhine river water is infiltrated, and 40 km3 /d is extracted for drinking water. The other 60 km3 /d is used to maintain the groundwater mound that keeps locally contaminated groundwater from industrial heritage sites out of the drinking water. The hydrochemical/isotope data from past and ongoing studies were consolidated to contextualize all the contributing water sources of the scheme before online noble gas and regular tritium monitoring commenced in the region. The historical and the new continuous tracer monitoring data is now used to inform new sampling protocols and create tracer-enabled/assimilated groundwater-surface water flow models, vastly helping algorithm-supported MAR optimization

Abstract

Modern societies rely heavily on subsurface resources and need open access to accurate and standardized scientific digital data that describe the subsurface’s infrastructure and geology, including the distribution of local and regional aquifers up to a depth of five kilometres. These data are essential for assessing and reducing climate change’s impact and enabling the green transition. Digital maps, 3D and 4D models of the subsurface are necessary to investigate and address issues such as groundwater quality and quantity, flood and drought impacts, renewable geo-energy solutions, availability of critical raw materials, resilient city planning, carbon capture and storage, disaster risk assessment and adaptation, and protection of groundwater-dependent terrestrial and associated aquatic ecosystems and biodiversity. For over a decade, EuroGeoSurveys, the Geological Surveys of Europe, has been working on providing harmonized digital European subsurface data through the European Geological Data Infrastructure, EGDI.

These data are invaluable for informed decision-making and policy implementation regarding the green transition, Sustainable Development Goals, and future Digital Twins in earth sciences. The database is continuously developed and improved in collaboration with relevant stakeholders to meet societal needs and facilitate sustainable, secure, and integrated management of sometimes competing uses of surface and subsurface resources.

Abstract

This paper presents the results of groundwater flow modelling studies that were conducted within the scope of the PRIMA RESERVOIR project. The project’s main goal is to develop an innovative methodology to mitigate land subsidence due to excessive groundwater exploitation in water-stressed Mediterranean watersheds. This objective is achieved by integrating earth-observation-derived land subsidence rates with a coupled implementation of numerical groundwater flow and geomechanical modelling. MODFLOWbased 3-D transient flow models were constructed for the four pilot sites (the coastland of Comacchio in Italy, the Alto Guadalentín aquifer in Spain, the Gediz River basin alluvial aquifer in Turkiye and the Azraq basin in Jordan) that have different hydrogeological properties and pose different challenges concerning water management. Models were calibrated and run for similar simulation periods (2013-2021) to obtain hydraulic head drawdowns and changes in groundwater storage. Land subsidence at these sites was evaluated using Advanced Differential Radar Interferometry (A-DInSAR) on image stacks from the Sentinel-1 satellite. Subsidence rates were then compared to hydraulic head drawdown rates to identify groundwater pumping-induced subsidence areas. The comparison for all study areas suggested that locations of maximum displacements do not necessarily coincide with areas that display the largest head drawdown calculated by the flow models. Other triggering factors, such as the thickness of compressible materials, are also related to high subsidence areas.

Abstract

Crystalline basement underlies much of Africa, and the groundwater within the shallow, weathered layer provides reliable drinking water for many people. This resource is key in adapting to changing climate, particularly in providing reliable water for drinking and smallscale irrigation. However, this requires higher yields from boreholes than currently abstracted. Renewed research is required to investigate sustainable yields from this type of aquifer and how it varies spatially. Recent work on crystalline basement rocks in Africa has shown that there are a number of important geological and geomorphological controls on shallow aquifer parameters; variability of geological properties and the impact of the landscape history is likely to have a strong control. Typically, the basement has experienced high metamorphic grades, which reduces intergranular porosity. Consequently, the aquifer relies on the presence of fault/ fracture zones; and the regolith’s depth and nature, which can have significantly higher porosity and permeability than the underlying bedrock. The interaction and variability of these key factors and climatic and landuse variables are likely to impact shallow aquifer productivity strongly. Here, we report on an ongoing study by UK and African scientists to understand how to represent the variability of geological, regolith and landscape factors across African crystalline basements. In tandem, a data-driven modelling approach is being used to examine these controls’ influence on groundwater yields. Continental-scale mapping of basement groundwater yield is planned, supporting those planning further aquifer development, including the growing use of solar-powered pumps.

Abstract

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

Abstract

The work presented in this paper incorporates spring data for further conceptualizing the hydrogeology of northern Namibia’s so-called “Karst Area”, an area around the towns of Tsumeb, Otavi and Grootfontein. Also called the Otavi Mountainland, it can be described as a mountainous highland of parallel, east-west trending elongated valleys and ranges shaped by the underlying folded units of carbonate rocks of the Damara Supergroup. The karst aquifers are a supplementary source to the central areas of the country during drought. Most of these 35 springs are often found near hilltop crests or high up on the mountain flanks rather than lower down at the valley floors. If flows are generated locally as gravity or contact overflow springs, studying them would not add much to conceptualizing the regional groundwater flow. Fundamental insights are provided if flows arise due to hydraulic pressure from deeper down. As artesian boreholes do not occur as a rule in the Karst Area, artesian springs might indicate the presence of deeper aquifers out of reach at normal drilling depth. One such hypothesis is that the bottom of the dolomitic synclines, structurally weaker at the fold axis, had been subjected to deep-seated karstification. The work presented here investigates that possibility and argues for and against it. In addition, established concepts of groundwater flow mechanisms for the area have been revisited. A conclusion has not yet been reached, but the balance of the arguments is presented.

Abstract

The alluvial aquifer in the Varaždin region has a long-standing problem with high groundwater nitrate concentrations, mainly from agricultural activities. Since groundwater is used in public water supply networks, it is important to ensure its sustainable use. The aquifer is also used to exploit gravel and sand, and the increased demand for this valuable construction material causes the excavation of gravel pit lakes, making groundwater more vulnerable. Although engineered processes can remove nitrate from groundwater, natural attenuation processes should be investigated to understand the nitrogen behaviour and additional mechanisms for groundwater remediation. Previous research has shown nitrate is a conservative contaminant in the critical zone. Aerobic conditions within an aquifer system prevent significant denitrification. Thus, nitrification is the main process controlling nitrogen dynamics in groundwater. Since groundwater and gravel pit lakes are hydraulically connected, and natural nitrate attenuation exists in these lakes, an additional mechanism for groundwater remediation is possible. This work used isotope hydrochemistry and groundwater modelling to investigate gravel pit lakes as possible sites to reduce nitrate concentration in groundwater. Based on the isotopic composition of groundwater and nitrate concentrations, water balance and solute mass balance were calculated, which made it possible to estimate the nitrate attenuation rate in gravel pit lakes. The gained retardation factor was applied to the groundwater flow and nitrate transport model through several scenarios to evaluate the contribution of gravel pit lakes in reducing the groundwater nitrate concentrations

Abstract

The identification of hydrogeological boundaries and the assessment of groundwater’s quantitative and qualitative status are necessary for delineating groundwater bodies, according to the European Guidelines. In this context, this study tries to verify the current delineation of groundwater bodies (GWBs) through hydrogeochemical methods and multicriteria statistical analyses. The areas of interest are three GWBs located in the northern part of Campania Region (Southern Italy): the Volturno Plain, a coastal plain constituted of fluvial, pyroclastic and marine sediments; the Plain of Naples, an innermost plain of fluvial and pyroclastic sediments and the Phlegrean Fields, an active volcanic area with a series of monogenic volcanic edifices. Hydrogeochemical methods (i.e., classical and modified Piper Diagram) and multivariate statistical analyses (i.e., factor analysis, FA) were performed to differentiate among the main hydrochemical processes occurring in the area. FA allowed the handling many geochemical and physical parameters measured in groundwater samples collected at about 200 sampling points in the decade of the 2010s. Results reveal five hydrogeochemical processes variably influencing the chemical characteristics of the three GWBs: salinization, carbonate rocks dissolution, natural or anthropogenic inputs, redox conditions, and volcanic product contribution. Hydrogeochemical methods and FA allow the identification of areas characterised by one or more hydrogeochemical processes, mostly reflecting known processes and highlighting the influence of groundwater flow paths on water chemistry. According to the current delineation of the three GWBs, some processes are peculiar to one GWB, but others are in common between two or more GWBs.

Abstract

Recent findings allow a better insight into the interaction between two aquifers and their vulnerabilities at the groundwater extraction site of Velm, which produces drinking water for around 55,000 households. The shallow aquifer that is exploited is situated in the Formation of Hannut. This aquifer is vulnerable to pollution, especially from the agricultural lands close to the extraction site and is sensitive to natural recharge. In this case, the groundwater is captured in a basin via a naturally occurring spring flow. The second aquifer is situated in the Cretaceous at 50 to 100 m below the surface and is pumped by four wells. The drinking water quality is guaranteed by mixing and treating these two waters. To optimize the central decalcification and the pollution risks, the production volume in the deep aquifer was increased from 2017 to 2021 at the expense of the shallow aquifer. This led to a decrease in the available volumes of the shallow aquifer, which indicated a leakage from the shallow to the deeper aquifer, which was unexpected. Groundwater modelling and time series analysis have been used to assess the impact of the increased production volumes and the longer dry periods. Based on this data, a maximum production volume of 1,000,000 m3 /year is considered best for the cretaceous aquifer. With this extraction rate in the Cretaceous, it is possible to supply sufficient drinking water and limit the impact on the Formation of Hannut.

Abstract

Deploying a participatory approach for surveying the complex geohydrological system and defining the status of the groundwater resources in the Kunzila catchment area has crucial importance towards conjunctive use of its water and land resources for sustainable economic growth, social well-being, and environmental protection. Several initiatives are being undertaken to pilot the ‘Integrated Landscape Management and WASH’ project in this community to implement evidence-based approaches. A comprehensive hydrogeological study has been carried out to understand the hydrogeological system, propose ecosystem restoration measures, identify suitable locations for drilling boreholes and design a groundwater and surface water monitoring network.

The first results pointed out the central area of the catchment as holding the best potential for groundwater abstraction, a productive Late Quaternary basalt aquifer. As this area is in use by private floriculture farms, several other borehole locations were sited to meet the domestic and livelihood demand across the watershed. In addition to the drinking water supply goals, the project proposed catchment intervention for soil and water conservation based on the Landscape Approach and 3R measures implementation - Retain, Recharge, Reuse. Such measures include but were not limited to riparian vegetation restoration, terracing and contour bunds, agroforestry, controlled grazing, etc. A telemetric monitoring network has been designed and installed to support the conjunctive management of shallow and deep groundwater water resources, streams and Lake Tana, together with a functional dashboard for data registrations and sharing. The monitoring program gauges the impact of groundwater abstraction and the quality parameters.

Abstract

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

Abstract

Various electrical potential difference-audio magnetotelluric (EPD-AMT) geophysical equipment is now available in the market for groundwater exploration, and the Groundwater Detector is one of them. Due to their low cost, deeper penetration, and real-time measurement, the technology has been widely received in many developing and underdeveloped countries. However, research to understand the application of the EPD-AMT surface geophysics approach in groundwater exploration is very limited. This research gap needs urgent attention to promote the technology’s meaningful and wider application. The lack of published case studies to demonstrate the capabilities of the EPD-AMT approach is a limiting factor to its application.

Research on different hydrogeological settings is paramount as part of the efforts to improve the practical understanding of the application of the EPD-AMT geophysical approach in groundwater exploration. This study shares field experience from applying the EPD-AMT Groundwater Detector geophysical technique to explore groundwater in dolomite, granite, and Karoo sandstone hardrock aquifers in Southern Africa.

Abstract

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

Abstract

Faced with climate change and population growth, Dutch drinking water company Dunea is looking for additional water resources to secure the drinking water supply for the coastal city of The Hague. One of the options is to enhance the existing managed aquifer recharge (MAR) system in the coastal dunes by extracting brackish groundwater. Extracting brackish groundwater provides an additional drinking water source, can protect existing production wells from salinization, and can effectively stabilise or even grow the freshwater reserves in the coastal dunes, according to numerical groundwater modelling. To test this concept in the field, a three-year pilot commenced in January 2022 at Dunea’s primary drinking water production site, Scheveningen. Brackish groundwater is extracted at a rate of 50 m3 /h with multiple well screens placed in a single borehole within the brackish transition zone (85-105 meters below sea level). The extracted groundwater is desalinated by reverse osmosis, whilst the flow rate and quality of extracted groundwater are continuously monitored. The hydraulic effects and the dynamic interfaces between fresh, brackish and saline groundwater are monitored with a dense network of piezometers, hydraulic head loggers and geo-electrical measurement techniques. At the IAH conference, the monitoring results of the pilot will be presented. Based on the results of the field pilot and additional numerical modelling, the feasibility of upscaling and replicating the concept of brackish groundwater extraction to optimize MAR and increase the availability of fresh groundwater in coastal areas is reflected.

Abstract

A hydrogeological investigation was conducted at a gold mine in the Mandiana region, northeast Guinea. The objectives of the investigation included: 1) Review the efficiency of the current dewatering system and 2) Assess potential dewatering impacts on neighbouring groundwater users. Historical and current hydrogeological information were reviewed and assessed to address the project objectives. The site geological succession contains laterites, saprolites, saprock, dolorite sill and fresh fractured bedrock below. A review of the borehole lithological logs, pump test and monitoring data confirmed that the contact zone between the saprock and the dolorite sill is the major aquifer zone with hydraulic conductivity up to 25 m/d, with a minor alluvial aquifer with hydraulic conductivity ~ 0.05 m/d. The current dewatering system is not as effective as it should be due to electrical issues causing seepage into the current pit floor. A combination of in-pit sumps and dewatering boreholes is recommended to ensure the mine pit’s dry working conditions. The neighbouring groundwater users tap into the alluvial aquifer with water levels ranging between 0-10 mbgl and are not at risk from mine dewatering impacts due to the dewatering boreholes tapping into the deeper saprock-dolorite contact zone. The shallow and deeper aquifers are hydraulically disconnected. The following is recommended: 1) Drilling of replacement dewatering boreholes and implementing continuous water level and abstraction rate monitoring, and 2) Discharge the in-pit sumps (alluvial aquifer inflow and rainfall) into the river downgradient of the mine to supplement recharge to the alluvial aquifer.

Abstract

This study presents a novel approach for developing geologically and hydrogeologically consistent groundwater models at large valley scales. Integrating geological, geophysical, and hydrogeological data into a single model is often challenging, but our methodology overcomes this challenge by combining the Ensemble Smoother with Multiple Data Assimilation algorithm (ESMDA) with a hierarchical geological modelling approach (ArchPy). The ESMDA framework assimilates geophysical and hydrogeological field data jointly. To diminish the computational cost, the forward geophysical and groundwater responses are computed in lower-dimensional spaces relevant to each physical problem, alleviating the computational burden and accelerating the inversion process. Combining multiple data sources and regional conceptual geological knowledge in a stochastic framework makes the resulting model accurate and incorporates robust uncertainty estimation. We demonstrate the applicability of our approach using actual data from the upper Aare Valley in Switzerland. Our results show that integrating different data types, each sensitive to different spatial dimensions enhances the global quality of the model within a reasonable computing time. This automatic generation of groundwater models with a robust uncertainty estimation has potential applications in a wide variety of hydrogeological issues. Our methodology provides a framework for efficiently integrating multiple data sources in geologically consistent models, facilitating the development of hydrogeological models that can inform sustainable water resource management.

Abstract

The Transboundary Groundwater Resilience (TGR) Network-of-Networks project brings together researchers from multiple countries to address the challenges of groundwater scarcity and continuing depletion. Improving groundwater resilience through international research collaborations and engaging professionals from hydrology, social science, data science, and related fields is a crucial strategy enabling better decision-making at the transboundary level. As a component of the underlying data infrastructure, the TGR project applies visual analytics and graph-theoretical approaches to explore the international academic network of transboundary groundwater research. This enables the identification of research clusters around specific topic areas within transboundary groundwater research, understanding how the network evolved over the years, and finding partners with matching or complementary research interests. Novel online software for analysing co-authorship networks, built on the online SuAVE (Survey Analysis via Visual Exploration, suave.sdsc.edu) visual analytics platform, will be demonstrated. The application uses OpenAlex, a new open-access bibliographic data source, to extract publications that mention transboundary aquifers or transboundary groundwater and automatically tag them with groundwater-specific keywords and names of studied aquifers. The analytics platform includes a series of data views and maps to help the user view the entire academic landscape of transboundary groundwater research, compute network fragmentation characteristics, focus on individual clusters or authors, view individual researchers’ profiles and publications, and determine their centrality and network role using betweenness, eigenvector centrality, key player fragmentation, and other network measures. This information helps guide the project’s data-driven international networking, making it more comprehensive and efficient.

Abstract

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

Abstract

The basis of a hydrogeological conceptual model is the comprehensive characterisation of the groundwater system. This ranges from discrete hydraulic feature analysis to local-scale testing to integrated regional-scale aquifer system conceptualisation. Interdisciplinary data integration is critical to each level of characterisation to gain a realistic, yet simplified representation of the hydrogeological system based on various data sources. Incorporation of geological datasets, including (but not limited to) structural and lithological mapping, geotechnical core logs and geophysical surveys, in conjunction with a tailored selection of hydraulic testing techniques, are often underutilised by hydrogeologists. Yet, the contribution of these alternative hydraulic datasets cannot be overstated.

A recent hydrogeological assessment and feasibility study forming part of the planned expansion project for a base-metal mine in the Northern Cape, South Africa, offers an ideal, practical example. The localised nature of the project area and the inherently complex geological setting required a more detailed conceptual model and hydrostratigraphic domaining approach. Highly heterogeneous stratigraphy and strong structural aquifer controls necessitated characterisation by reviewing, testing and analysing various datasets. Exploratory core datasets, hydraulic aquifer tests, geological and downhole geophysical datasets, and statistical Rock Quality Designation—hydraulic conductivity relationships were interpreted to produce meaningful, refined hydraulic process identifications. A comprehensive local groundwater framework, discretised into various hydrostratigraphic units and structural domains with specified hydraulic parameters, was incorporated to provide a novel, more robust conceptual understanding of the unique hydrogeological system.

Abstract

Drywells are extremely useful for coping with excess surface water in areas where drainage and diversion of storm flows are limited, facilitating stormwater infiltration and groundwater recharge. Drywells have been used for stormwater management in locations that receive high precipitation volumes, naturally or due to climate change; however, to date, they have not been developed in urban areas overlying karst landscapes. To test the performance of karst drywells, we constructed a pilot system for collecting, filtering, and recharging urban stormwater through drywells in karst rock. The study site is in the Judaean Mountains, an urban residential area in Jerusalem, Israel. The infiltration capacity of the drywells was evaluated using continuous and graduated water injection tests, and its effective hydraulic conductivity (K) was estimated. Drywells’ infiltration capacity was up to 22 m3 /hour (the maximum discharge delivered by a nearby fire hydrant), while monitored water levels in the drywells were relatively stable. Calculated hydraulic conductivities were in the range of K=0.1-100 m/ day, and generally, K was inversely proportional to the rock quality designation (RQD) index (obtained from rock cores during the drilling of the drywells). The pilot system performance was tested in the recent winter: during 9 days with a total rainfall of 295 mm, a cumulative volume of 45 m3 was recharged through the drywell, with a maximum discharge of 13 m3 / hour. High-conductivity karst drywells and adequate pre-treatment filtration can be valuable techniques for urban flood mitigation and stormwater recharge.

Abstract

Annually, UNICEF spends approximately US$1B in water, sanitation and hygiene programming (WASH), approximately half of which is spent in humanitarian contexts. In emergencies, UNICEF supports the delivery of water, sanitation and hygiene programming under very difficult programming contexts – interruptions to access, power supply and a lack of reliable data. Many of these humanitarian situations are in contexts where water scarcity is prevalent and where the demand and competition for water are increasing, contributing to tension between and within communities. While water scarcity is not new to many of these water-scarce areas, climate change is compounding the already grave challenges related to ensuring access to safe and sustainable water services, changing recharge patterns, destroying water systems and increasing water demand. Incorrectly designed and implemented water systems can contribute to conflict, tension, and migration. Ensuring a comprehensive approach to water security and resilient WASH services can reduce the potential for conflict and use water as a channel for peace and community resilience. This presents an enormous opportunity for both humanitarian and development stakeholders to design water service programmes to ensure community resilience through a four-part approach: 1. Groundwater resource assessments 2. Sustainable yield assessments (taking into consideration future conditions) 3. Climate risk assessments 4. Groundwater monitoring/early warning systems UNICEF promotes this approach across its WASH programming and the sector through technical briefs, support and capacity building.

Abstract

The Sandveld (Western Cape, South Africa) is a critical potato production area on the national production scale, especially for table potatoes. As the area is situated on the continent’s West Coast, it is a dry area of low rainfall (less than 300 mm /a). The bulk of the irrigation water for agriculture in the region is derived from groundwater. Approximately 60 Mm3 /a of groundwater is abstracted for irrigation of potatoes in the broader Sandveld, assuming a 4-year rotation cycle. The abstraction of groundwater is a sensitive issue in the Sandveld as groundwater also plays a critical role in supplying water to towns in the area, water for domestic use, and it also plays a critical role in sustaining sensitive ecosystems (such as the coastal lake Velorenvlei).

The groundwater resources have been monitored for nearly thirty years now. The results indicate areas where a slow but consistent decline in groundwater levels and groundwater quality is occurring. The trends can also predict when the aquifers will become depleted, and the groundwater will become too saline for use. This is critical information for management interventions to be implemented now to protect the area from irreversible damage.

Abstract

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

Abstract

Mt. Fuji is the iconic centrepiece of a large, tectonically active volcanic watershed (100 km2 ), which plays a vital role in supplying safe drinking water to millions of people through groundwater and numerous freshwater springs. Situated at the top of the sole known continental triple-trench junction, the Fuji watershed experiences significant tectonic instability and pictures complex geology. Recently, the conventional understanding of Mt. Fuji catchment being conceptually simple, laminar groundwater flow system with three isolated aquifers was challenged: the combined use of noble gases, vanadium, and microbial eDNA as measured in different waters around Fuji revealed the presence of substantial deep groundwater water upwelling along Japan’s tectonically most active fault system, the Fujikawa Kako Fault Zone [1]. These findings call for even deeper investigations of the hydrogeology and the mixing dynamics within large-scale volcanic watersheds, typically characterized by complex geologies and extensive networks of fractures and faults. In our current study, we approach these questions by integrating existing and emerging methodologies, such as continuous, high-resolution monitoring of dissolved gases (GE-MIMS [2]) and microbes [3], eDNA, trace elements, and integrated 3-D hydrogeological modelling [4]. The collected tracer time series and hydraulic and seismic observations are used to develop an integrated SW-GW flow model of the Mt. Fuji watershed. Climate change projections will further inform predictive modelling and facilitate the design of resilient and sustainable water resource management strategies in tectonically active volcanic regions

Abstract

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

Abstract

Transboundary aquifers in Europe are managed according to the Water Framework Directive (WFD) through international river basin districts (IRBD) management plans. Paragraph 11 in the WFD states that each Member State shall ensure the establishment of a programme of measures, PoM, for each river basin district, RBD, or part of an IRBD within its territory. Easy access to harmonized data from neighbouring countries part of the aquifer is essential to analyse the groundwater status and make proper PoMs. The datasets must be available in machine-readable format via an Application Programming Interface (API) and, where relevant, as a bulk download. The metadata describing the data shall be within the scope of the Infrastructure for Spatial Information in the European Community (INSPIRE) data themes set. The datasets must also be described in a complete and publicly available online documentation describing the data structure. Using a questionnaire survey of nine European countries, groundwater sampling and analysis routines are compared to evaluate if data are comparable and accessible across borders.

Abstract

Groundwater represents a crucial source of drinking water in the Lille metropolitan area. Despite its importance, the resource is vulnerable to the potential evolution of land use: recharge, runoff and evapotranspiration processes in a soil-sealing context and changes in cultural practices. As a result, stakeholders emphasized the importance of exploring the influence of land use on groundwater to ensure sustainable resource management and enhance territorial planning. The 3D hydrodynamic model helped manage groundwater resources, but the (MARTHE code) has a significant limitation in that it does not consider the impact of land use evolution. We propose to investigate the contribution of a hydrological distributed numerical approach incorporating land cover data in groundwater modelling compared to a global approach at the scale of a peri-urban territory. To do so, we use the HELP code by considering the temporal and spatial evolution of land use and their associated characteristics, such as vegetation and soil properties, to detail recharge and runoff over more than 20 years that we incorporate into the initial groundwater model.

The two approaches yielded comparable global water balance results. However, at the local scale, the model accounting for land use showed significantly different hydric components. Choosing the appropriate model depends on the specific research question and spatial scale, and considering land use evolution is crucial for accurate urban planning impact assessments, especially at the district level.

Abstract

The Kalahari iron manganese field (KIMF) in the Northern Cape, South Africa, was historically exploited by only three mines, with Hotazel the only town and the rest of the area being largely rural, with agricultural stock/ game farming the major activity. Since 2010, mining activities have increased to more than 10 operational mines with increased water demand and environmental impacts on groundwater. The area is within catchments of the Matlhwaring, Moshaweng, Kuruman and Gamogara rivers that drain to the Molopo River in the Northern Cape. All the rivers are non-perennial, with annual flow occurrence in the upstream areas that reach this downstream area once every 10 years. The area is semi-arid, with annual evaporation nearly five times the annual precipitation. The precipitation is less than 300mm, with summer precipitation in the form of thunderstorms. Vegetation is sparse, consisting mainly of grasslands, shrubs and some thorn trees, notably the majestic camel thorns. The Vaal Gamagara Government Water Supply Scheme imports 11 Ml/d or 4Mm3 /a water for mining and domestic purposes in the KIMF section. The area is covered with Kalahari Group formation of 30 to 150 m thick with primary aquifers developed in the basal Wessels gravels and Eden sandstones for local use. The middle Boudin clay forms an aquitard that isolates and reduces recharge. Water levels range from 25 to 70m, and monitoring indicates local dewatering sinks and pollution. This study will report on the water uses, monitoring and observed groundwater impacts within the current climatic conditions.

Abstract

Shallow groundwater dynamics play a crucial role in wetland ecosystems and are key to climate change resilience. Therefore, conserving and restoring wetland areas requires excellent knowledge of groundwater flow dynamics, which are often rapidly changing following extreme weather events and anthropogenic impacts such as groundwater extraction. Traditional methods to estimate groundwater flow require extensive modelling or rely on point measurements, missing the effect of crucial short-term events and impeding quick actions to conserve the wetlands’ ecohydrological status. Here, we present a newly developed sensor that can measure real-time groundwater flow velocity and direction. The sensor probe consists of two bidirectional flow sensors that are superimposed. It is installed in a dedicated pre-pack filter and can measure a broad range of groundwater flow velocities from 0.5 cm/ day to 2000 cm/day. With an IoT (Internet of Things) system, sensor data is wirelessly transmitted and visualized in real-time on an online dashboard. In addition, we show a selection of results from a case study in the Biebrza National Park (Poland) and a nature reserve in Damme (Belgium). In both ecosystems, we could capture changes in groundwater flow velocity and direction resulting from precipitation and evapotranspiration events. As such, we are confident that our sensors provide new insights into rapidly changing groundwater dynamics and will become an invaluable tool in ecohydrological studies worldwide, ultimately leading to more integrated management strategies to protect and conserve remaining wetlands.

Abstract

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