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Groundwater flow in the Ischia volcanic island (Italy) and its implications for thermal water abstraction | Ecoulements souterrains au sein de l’île volcanique d’Ischia (Italie) et leurs implications pour l’exploitation de l’eau thermale El flujo de aguas subterráneas en la isla volcánica de Ischia (Italia) y sus implicancias para la extracción de aguas termales Ischia火山岛(意大利)地下水流及其对地热水开采的影响 Fluxo subterrâneo na ilha vulcânica de Ischia (Itália) e suas implicações para a captação de água termal النص الكامل
2020
Piscopo, Vincenzo | Lotti, Francesca | Formica, Fulvio | Lana, Luigi | Pianese, Luigi
This study improves knowledge on the hydrogeology of Ischia Island, an active volcano of southern Italy. Combining previous published and unpublished data with newly collected data, and through the results of simplified numerical models, the existing conceptual hydrogeological model of the volcanic island has been reviewed and the present impact of intensive withdrawals on the island’s groundwater resources has been examined. Two areas with different hydrogeological characteristics have been recognized: (1) the resurgent block of Mt. Epomeo, where an independent and uplifted basal groundwater circulation exists; (2) the external areas of Mt. Epomeo, where a continuous basal aquifer and local discontinuous perched aquifers have been distinguished. The marginal faults of the resurgent block of Mt. Epomeo represent the preferential pathways of ascending deep fluids. In natural conditions, the island’s aquifers are recharged by rainfall and by deep fluids from beneath, discharging towards the sea and the springs. Since the start of activity at the spa facilities, involving intensive pumping from wells, a further and significant recharge of the aquifers has come from seawater and from increased upwelling of the deep fluids. Although this does not compromise the sustainability of the groundwater withdrawals in quantitative terms, the pumping rates determine the quality of the water captured by the wells. The great variability in temperature and chemical composition of groundwater of the island is also influenced by local hydrogeological parameters and characteristics of the wells from which the water samples were taken, as well as the phenomena of interaction among different end-members.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Evidence of freshened groundwater below a tropical fringing reef | Mise en évidence d’eaux souterraines peu salées sous un récif frangeant tropical Evidencias de agua subterránea dulce por debajo de un arrecife tropical 热带边缘礁下的地下淡水证据 Evidência de águas subterrâneas dulcificadas abaixo de um recife tropical em franja النص الكامل
2020
Hagedorn, Benjamin | Becker, Matthew W. | Silbiger, Nyssa J.
Submarine groundwater discharge (SGD) is widely acknowledged as a key driver of environmental change in tropical island coral reefs. Previous work has addressed SGD and groundwater-reef interactions at isolated submarine springs; however, there are still many outstanding questions about the mechanisms and distribution of groundwater discharge to reefs. To understand how groundwater migrates to reefs, a series of offshore ²²²Rn (radon) and submarine electrical resistivity (ER) surveys were performed on the tropical volcanic island of Mo’orea, French Polynesia. These surveys suggest that fresher water underlies the fringing reef, apparently confined by a <1-m-thick low-permeability layer referred to as a reef flat plate. Reef flat plates have been documented elsewhere in tropical reefs as thin, laterally continuous limestone units that form through the super-saturation of calcium carbonate in the overlying marine waters. In other tropical reefs, the reef flat plate is underlain by a highly permeable karstic limestone formation, but the submarine reef geology on Mo’orea is still uncertain. Numerical modeling of two-dimensional reef transects and SGD quantifications, based on water budget and radon/salinity mass balance, support the confining nature of the reef flat plates and indicate important implications for SGD impacts to tropical reefs. Except where incised by streams or local springs, reef flat plates may route SGD to lagoons or to the reef crest 100s of meters offshore. Because groundwater can transport pollutants, nutrients, and low pH waters, the reef flat plate may play an important role in the spatial patterns of reef ecology and coastal acidification.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Source partitioning of anthropogenic groundwater nitrogen in a mixed-use landscape, Tutuila, American Samoa | Répartition des sources d’azote d’origine humaine dans l’eau souterraine dans un contexte d’usages multiples, Tutuila, Samoa Américaines Separación de la fuentes del nitrógeno antropogénico del agua subterránea en un paisaje de uso mixto, Tutuila, Samoa Americana تقسيم مصدر النيتروجين البشرية-المنشأ في المياه الجوفية في المناطق مختلطة الاستخدام، توتويلا، ساموا الأمريكية 美属萨摩亚图图伊拉岛混合用途景观中源于人类活动的地下水中氮的源分隔 Identificação da fonte de nitrogênio antropogênico nas águas subterrâneas em ambiente com atividades humanas diversificadas, em Tutuila, Samoa Americana النص الكامل
2017
Shuler, Christopher K. | El-Kadi, Aly I. | Dulai, Henrietta | Glenn, Craig R. | Fackrell, Joseph
This study presents a modeling framework for quantifying human impacts and for partitioning the sources of contamination related to water quality in the mixed-use landscape of a small tropical volcanic island. On Tutuila, the main island of American Samoa, production wells in the most populated region (the Tafuna-Leone Plain) produce most of the island’s drinking water. However, much of this water has been deemed unsafe to drink since 2009. Tutuila has three predominant anthropogenic non-point-groundwater-pollution sources of concern: on-site disposal systems (OSDS), agricultural chemicals, and pig manure. These sources are broadly distributed throughout the landscape and are located near many drinking-water wells. Water quality analyses show a link between elevated levels of total dissolved groundwater nitrogen (TN) and areas with high non-point-source pollution density, suggesting that TN can be used as a tracer of groundwater contamination from these sources. The modeling framework used in this study integrates land-use information, hydrological data, and water quality analyses with nitrogen loading and transport models. The approach utilizes a numerical groundwater flow model, a nitrogen-loading model, and a multi-species contaminant transport model. Nitrogen from each source is modeled as an independent component in order to trace the impact from individual land-use activities. Model results are calibrated and validated with dissolved groundwater TN concentrations and inorganic δ¹⁵N values, respectively. Results indicate that OSDS contribute significantly more TN to Tutuila’s aquifers than other sources, and thus should be prioritized in future water-quality management efforts.
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