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Taller de la Region Sudasi?tica sobre Sistemas de Riego con Aguas Subterr?neas Administrados por los Agricultores y el Manejo Sustentable del Agua Subterr?nea Dhaka, Bangladesh 18-21 de mayo de 1992South Asian Regional Workshop on Groundwater Farmer-Managed Irrigation Systems and Sustainable Groundwater Management, Dhaka, Bangladesh 18-21 May 1992
1992
Sakthivadivel, Ramaswamy | Parker, D. | Manor, S.
Groundwater recharge processes in an Asian mega-delta: hydrometric evidence from Bangladesh | Processus de recharge des eaux souterraines dans un méga-delta d’Asie: preuves hydrométriques au Bengladesh Procesos de recarga de aguas subterráneas en un megadelta asiático: evidencias hidrométricas de Bangladesh 亚洲巨型三角洲地下水的补给过程:孟加拉国的水文证据 Processos de recarga de água subterrânea em um mega-delta asiático: evidências hidrométricas de Bangladesh Texte intégral
2020
Nowreen, Sara | Taylor, R. G. | Shamsudduha, M. | Salehin, M. | Zahid, A. | Ahmed, K. M.
Groundwater is used intensively in Asian mega-deltas yet the processes by which groundwater is replenished in these deltaic systems remain inadequately understood. Drawing insight from hourly monitoring of groundwater levels and rainfall in two contrasting settings, comprising permeable surficial deposits of Holocene age and Plio-Pleistocene terrace deposits, together with longer-term, lower-frequency records of groundwater levels, river stage, and rainfall from the Bengal Basin, conceptual models of recharge processes in these two depositional environments are developed. The representivity of these conceptual models across the Bengal Basin in Bangladesh is explored by way of statistical cluster analysis of groundwater-level time series data. Observational records reveal that both diffuse and focused recharge processes occur in Holocene deposits, whereas recharge in Plio-Pleistocene deposits is dominated by indirect leakage from river channels where incision has enabled a direct hydraulic connection between river channels and the Plio-Pleistocene aquifer underlying surficial clays. Seasonal cycles of recharge and discharge including the onset of dry-season groundwater-fed irrigation are well characterised by compiled observational records. Groundwater depletion, evident from declining groundwater levels with a diminished seasonality, is pronounced in Plio-Pleistocene environments where direct recharge is inhibited by the surficial clays. In contrast, intensive shallow groundwater abstraction in Holocene environments can enhance direct and indirect recharge via a more permeable surface geology. The vital contributions of indirect recharge of shallow groundwater identified in both depositional settings in the Bengal Basin highlight the critical limitation of using models that exclude this process in the estimation of groundwater recharge in Asian mega-deltas.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]A regional groundwater-flow model for sustainable groundwater-resource management in the south Asian megacity of Dhaka, Bangladesh | Ein regionales Grundwassermodell für ein nachhaltiges Grundwassermanagement in der südasiatischen Megacity von Dhaka, Bangladesch Modèle régional d’écoulement des eaux souterraines pour une gestion durable des ressources en eaux souterraines dans la mégapole de Dhaka du Sud de l’Asie, au Bangladesh Un modelo regional de flujo de agua subterránea para la gestión sostenible de los recursos de hídricos subterráneos en la megaciudad de Dhaka en el Asia meridional, Bangladesh 南亚特大城市孟加拉达卡地下水资源可持续管理的区域地下水流模型 Um modelo regional de fluxo de águas subterrâneas para a gestão sustentável dos recursos hídricos subterrâneos na megacidade do sul da Ásia de Daca, Bangladesh Texte intégral
2017
Islam, Md Bayzidul | Firoz, A. B. M. | Foglia, Laura | Marandi, Andres | Khan, Abidur Rahman | Schüth, Christoph | Ribbe, Lars
The water resources that supply most of the megacities in the world are under increased pressure because of land transformation, population growth, rapid urbanization, and climate-change impacts. Dhaka, in Bangladesh, is one of the largest of 22 growing megacities in the world, and it depends on mainly groundwater for all kinds of water needs. The regional groundwater-flow model MODFLOW-2005 was used to simulate the interaction between aquifers and rivers in steady-state and transient conditions during the period 1981–2013, to assess the impact of development and climate change on the regional groundwater resources. Detailed hydro-stratigraphic units are described according to 150 lithology logs, and a three-dimensional model of the upper 400 m of the Greater Dhaka area was constructed. The results explain how the total abstraction (2.9 million m³/d) in the Dhaka megacity, which has caused regional cones of depression, is balanced by recharge and induced river leakage. The simulated outcome shows the general trend of groundwater flow in the sedimentary Holocene aquifers under a variety of hydrogeological conditions, which will assist in the future development of a rational and sustainable management approach.
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