Delineating the origins and processes of groundwater salinization and quality degradation in a coastal irrigated plain, Korba (Northeastern Tunisia)
2022
Slama, Fairouz | Nasri, Nesrine | Bouhlila, Rachida
From 2006 to 2020, groundwater investigations were conducted in the Korba coastal aquifer in northern Tunisia along two flow paths (transects S1 and S2), perpendicular to the shoreline. Groundwater sampling, hydrodynamic monitoring, and electrical tomography imaging were performed in situ. Geochemical analysis (Ionic ratios, ionic deltas, conventional diagrams, and stable isotopes) and modelling using PHREEQC, and multivariate statistical analysis were applied. The objective was to identify the potential origin of groundwater salinization (i.e., high TDS and NO₃) and to study associated processes. The groundwater flow inversion was corroborated by the piezometric survey in transect S1, where a piezometric depression of 5 m was detected at 4000 m from the seashore. Seawater intrusion and agricultural contamination, mainly through N-fertilizers, both contribute to groundwater mineralization and consequently salinization, according to PCA analysis. The impacted geochemical area of seawater intrusion was estimated to be 4000 and 1500 m, respectively, along transect S1 and transect S2. Inversely, agricultural contamination acts in internal areas beginning at 2000 m and 1500 m from the shoreline for S1 and S2, respectively. Results of different scenarios of inverse geochemical modelling along flow paths indicated that mixing, ion exchange, dissolution of gypsum, and precipitation of dolomite and calcite are the main processes controlling the groundwater composition in the coastal study area.
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