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Shallow groundwater systems in a polar desert, McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica | Systèmes peu profonds d’eau souterraine dans un désert polaire, Vallées sèches de McMurdo, Antarctique Sistemas de agua subterránea poco profundos en un desierto polar, McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antartica 南极洲McMurdo Dry山谷极地沙漠的浅层地下水系统 Sistemas de águas subterrâneas pouco profundas num deserto polar, McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antártida Full text
2013
Gooseff, MichaelN. | Barrett, JohnE. | Levy, JosephS.
The McMurdo Dry Valleys (MDVs), Antarctica, exist in a hyperarid polar desert, underlain by deep permafrost. With an annual mean air temperature of −18 °C, the MDVs receive <10 cm snow-water equivalent each year, collecting in leeward patches across the landscape. The landscape is dominated by expansive ice-free areas of exposed soils, mountain glaciers, permanently ice-covered lakes, and stream channels. An active layer of seasonally thawed soil and sediment extends to less than 1 m from the surface. Despite the cold and low precipitation, liquid water is generated on glaciers and in snow patches during the austral summer, infiltrating the active layer. Across the MDVs, groundwater is generally confined to shallow depths and often in unsaturated conditions. The current understanding and the biogeochemical/ecological significance of four types of shallow groundwater features in the MDVs are reviewed: local soil-moisture patches that result from snow-patch melt, water tracks, wetted margins of streams and lakes, and hyporheic zones of streams. In general, each of these features enhances the movement of solutes across the landscape and generates soil conditions suitable for microbial and invertebrate communities.
Show more [+] Less [-]Mechanism of groundwater recharge in the middle-latitude desert of eastern Hunshandake, China: diffuse or focused recharge? | Mécanisme de recharge des eaux souterraines dans le désert de moyenne latitude de l’est d’Hunshandake, Chine: infiltration diffuse ou concentrée? Mecanismo de recarga del agua subterránea en el desierto de latitudes medias del este de Hunshandake, China: ¿recarga difusa o concentrada? 中纬度中国浑善达克沙地东部地下水的补给机制:扩散补给还是集中补给? Mecanismos de recarga subterrânea no deserto de média latitude de Hunshandake oriental, China: recarga difusa ou pontual? Full text
2019
Ren, Xiaozong | Zhu, Bingqi | Liu, Min | Zhang, Yingzhen | He, Zhiming | Rioual, Patrick
Although water is scarce in most deserts of the world, the middle-latitude desert of Hunshandake, China, has abundant water resources, mainly groundwater. In this study, isotopic and hydrochemical compositions were investigated to understand the recharge of groundwater in this desert. The groundwaters are fresh and depleted in δ²H and δ¹⁸O, compared with modern precipitation, but have high values of tritium (5–25 TU), indicating that these groundwaters are likely less than 70 years old but not of meteoric origin. Clear differences were observed between the north and south parts of the desert. Groundwater in the northern part is characterized by lower landform elevation, lower ion concentrations, higher tritium contents, higher deuterium excess, and more depleted values of δ²H and δ¹⁸O than that in the southern part. This indicates a discrepancy between the topographic hydraulic gradient and the isotopic and hydrochemical gradients of groundwater in the desert. It also implies different water sources between the two areas. Combined analysis was further performed on natural waters from the Dali Basin and surrounding mountains. It indicated that groundwater in the north is mainly sourced from the Daxin’Anling Mountains, by leaking of the Xilamulan River water through a thick faulted aquifer. Groundwater in the south has two sources, the Yinshan Mountains and Daxing’Anlin Mountains. Therefore, modern focused recharge is more significant for groundwater recharge in the desert than the mechanisms of diffuse recharge. A conceptual model of groundwater recharge is proposed: the MTVG (mountain water – tectonic fault hydrology – unconfined vadose zone – groundwater) mechanism.
Show more [+] Less [-]Analysis of groundwater flow in arid areas with limited hydrogeological data using the Grey Model: a case study of the Nubian Sandstone, Kharga Oasis, Egypt | Analyse du débit de nappe souterraine dans une zone aride avec des données hydrogéologiques limitées utilisant le Modèle de Grey: étude de cas du Grès Nubien, oasis de Kharga, Egypte Análisis de flujo de agua subterránea en áreas áridas con datos hidrogeológicos limitados usando el modelo Grey: un caso de estudio de las Areniscas de Nubian, Oasis de Kharga, Egipto Análise do fluxo das águas subterrâneas em zonas áridas com dados hidrogeológicos limitados usando o Modelo Cinza: um estudo de caso do Arenito Núbio, Oásis Kharga, Egito Full text
2013
Mahmod, Wael Elham | Watanabe, Kunio | Zahr-Eldeen, Ashraf A.
Management of groundwater resources can be enhanced by using numerical models to improve development strategies. However, the lack of basic data often limits the implementation of these models. The Kharga Oasis in the western desert of Egypt is an arid area that mainly depends on groundwater from the Nubian Sandstone Aquifer System (NSAS), for which the hydrogeological data needed for groundwater simulation are lacking, thereby introducing a problem for model calibration and validation. The Grey Model (GM) was adopted to analyze groundwater flow. This model combines a finite element method (FEM) with a linear regression model to try to obtain the best-fit piezometric-level trends compared to observations. The GM simulation results clearly show that the future water table in the northeastern part of the study area will face a severe drawdown compared with that in the southwestern part and that the hydraulic head difference between these parts will reach 140 m by 2060. Given the uncertainty and limitation of available data, the GM produced more realistic results compared with those obtained from a FEM alone. The GM could be applied to other cases with similar data limitations.
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