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Multi-source water characterisation for water supply and management strategies on a small Mediterranean island | Caractérisation multi-source pour des stratégies d’approvisionnement et de gestion de l’eau sur une petite île méditerranéenne Caracterización del agua de múltiples fuentespara el suministro de agua y estrategias de gestión en una pequeña isla del Mediterráneo 地中海小岛上用于供水和管理策略的多源水特征 Caracterização da água de várias fontes para estratégias de gerenciamento e abastecimento de água em uma pequena ilha do Mediterrâneo Texte intégral
2020
Cappucci, Sergio | De Cassan, Maurizio | Grillini, Marcello | Proposito, Marco | Screpanti, Augusto
The small islands in the Mediterranean Sea suffer water shortages, aggravated by pressure from tourism during the dry season. Many are affected by the intense and increasing human water demand and the harsh climatic and geographic nature of the island terrain. The present study, carried out on the island of Favignana, Egadi Archipelago (southern Italy), evaluates the regime of recharge to the subsurface, and hypothesizes a solution for identifying the areas where groundwater is most abundant, as well as the best management options for human use. By means of hydrological measurements and chemical analyses, a specific location has been identified in the eastern sector of the island where groundwater has optimal quality and the water table is at a depth of only a few metres. In other areas of the island the groundwater is more saline, due to seawater intrusion, and it is present only at greater depths. The residents of the island have in the past lived harmoniously with the climatic and hydrological regime of the island, and have shown good ability to manage the groundwater resources, fed by the limited precipitation that comes in winter, using it as a supplement to the drinking water supply that comes from Trapani (mainland Sicily) by a submarine pipeline and by tanker. Optimized management of the groundwater resources could reduce the volume of freshwater transferred from the mainland.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Effect of temperature variations on the travel time of infiltrating water in the Amsterdam Water Supply Dunes (the Netherlands) | Effet des variations de la température sur le temps de transit de l’eau d’infiltration dans les Dunes d’Approvisionnement en Eau d‘Amsterdam (Pays Bas) Efecto de las variaciones de temperatura en el tiempo de tránsito de las aguas infiltradas en las Dunas para el Abastecimiento de Agua en Ámsterdam (Países Bajos) 温度变化对阿姆斯特丹供水沙丘(荷兰)入渗水运移时间的影响 Efeito das variações da temperatura no tempo de deslocamento da água infiltrada nas Dunas de Armazenamento de Água em Amsterdam (Países Baixos) Texte intégral
2019
Liu, Sida | Zhou, Yangxiao | Kamps, Pierre | Smits, Frank | Olsthoorn, Theo
Travel time is one of the important criteria in the design of managed aquifer recharge systems for securing good drinking water quality. Traditionally, groundwater travel time has been modelled without considering the effect of temperature. In this study, a cross-sectional heat transport model was constructed for the Amsterdam dune filtration system (in the Netherlands) to analyse the effect of temperature on groundwater travel times. A groundwater flow model, a chloride transport model, and a heat transport model were iteratively calibrated with measured groundwater levels, chloride concentrations, and temperature series in order to improve model calibration and reduce model uncertainty. The coupled flow and heat transport model with temperature-dependent density and viscosity provided more accurate estimation of travel times. The results show that seasonal temperature fluctuations in the source water in the infiltration pond cause temperature variations in the shallow groundwater. Viscosity is more sensitive to temperature changes and has a larger effect on groundwater travel times. Groundwater travel time in the shallow sand aquifer increases from 60 days when computed with the traditional groundwater flow model to 73 days in the winter season and 95 days in the summer season when computed with the coupled model. Longer travel time is beneficial for water quality improvement. Thus, it is important to consider the effect of temperature variations on groundwater travel times for the design and operation of managed aquifer recharge systems.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Simulation-optimization model for water management in hydraulic fracturing operations | Modèle de simulation et d’optimisation de la gestion de l’eau dans les opérations de fracturation hydraulique Modelo de simulación y optimización para la gestión del agua en operaciones de fracturación hidráulica 水力压裂过程中水管理模拟-最优化模型 Modelo simulação-otimização para gestão da água em operações de fraturamento hidráulico Texte intégral
2015
Hernandez, E. A. | Uddameri, V.
A combined simulation-optimization model was developed to minimize the freshwater footprint at multi-well hydraulic fracturing sites. The model seeks to reduce freshwater use by blending it with brackish groundwater and recovered water. Time-varying water quality and quantity mass balance expressions and drawdown calculations using the Theis solution along with the superposition principle were embedded into the optimization model and solved using genetic algorithms. The model was parameterized for representative conditions in the Permian Basin oil and gas play region with the Dockum Formation serving as the brackish water source (Texas, USA). The results indicate that freshwater use can be reduced by 25–30 % by blending. Recovered water accounted for 2–3 % of the total blend or 10–15 % of total water recovered on-site. The concentration requirements of sulfate and magnesium limited blending. The evaporation in the frac pit constrained the amount blended during summer, while well yield of the brackish (Dockum) aquifer constrained the blending during winter. The Edwards-Trinity aquifer provided the best quality water compared to the Ogallala and Pecos Valley aquifers. However, the aquifer has low diffusivity causing the drawdown impacts to be felt over large areas. Speciation calculations carried out using PHREEQC indicated that precipitation of barium and strontium minerals is unlikely in the blended water. Conversely, the potential for precipitation of iron minerals is high. The developed simulation-optimization modeling framework is flexible and easily adapted for water management at other fracturing sites.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Seasonal trend analysis (STA) of MODIS vegetation index time series for the mangrove canopy of the Teacapan-Agua Brava lagoon system, Mexico Texte intégral
2019
Alejandro Berlanga-Robles, César | Ruiz-Luna, Arturo | Nepita Villanueva, Marta Rocío
Monthly time series, from 2001 to 2016, of the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) and the Enhanced Vegetation Index (EVI) from MOD13Q1 products were analyzed with Seasonal Trend Analysis (STA), assessing seasonal and long-term changes in the mangrove canopy of the Teacapan-Agua Brava lagoon system, the largest mangrove ecosystem in the Mexican Pacific coast. Profiles from both vegetation indices described similar phenological trends, but the EVI was more sensitive in detecting intra-annual changes. We identified a seasonal cycle dominated by Laguncularia racemosa and Rhizophora mangle mixed patches, with the more closed canopy occurring in the early autumn, and the maximum opening in the dry season. Mangrove patches dominated by Avicennia germinans displayed seasonal peaks in the winter. Curves fitted for the seasonal vegetation indices were better correlated with accumulated precipitation and solar radiation among the assessed climate variables (Pearson’s correlation coefficients, estimated for most of the variables, were r ≥ 0.58 p < 0.0001), driving seasonality for tidal basins with mangroves dominated by L. racemosa and R. mangle. For tidal basins dominated by A. germinans, the maximum and minimum temperatures and monthly precipitation fit better seasonally with the vegetation indices (r ≥ 0.58, p < 0.0001). Significant mangrove canopy reductions were identified in all the analyzed tidal basins (z values for the Mann-Kendall test ≤ −1.96), but positive change trends were recorded in four of the basins, while most of the mangrove canopy (approximately 87%) displayed only seasonal canopy changes or canopy recovery (z > −1.96). The most resilient mangrove forests were distributed in tidal basins dominated by L. racemosa and R. mangle (Mann-Kendal Tau t ≥ 0.4, p ≤ 0.03), while basins dominated by A. germinans showed the most evidence of disturbance.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Metal partitioning in sediments and mineralogical controls on the acid mine drainage in Ribeira da Água Forte (Aljustrel, Iberian Pyrite Belt, Southern Portugal) Texte intégral
2012
Maia, Flávia | Pinto, Cláudia | Waerenborgh, João Carlos | Gonçalves, Mário A. | Prazeres, Cátia | Carreira, Ondina | Sério, Susana
This work focuses on the geochemical processes taking place in the acid drainage in the Ribeira da Água Forte, located in the Aljustrel mining area in the Iberian Pyrite Belt. The approach involved water and stream sediment geochemical analyses, as well as other techniques such as sequential extraction, Mössbauer spectroscopy, and X-ray diffraction. Ribeira da Água Forte is a stream that drains the area of the old mine dumps of the Aljustrel mine, which have for decades been a source of acid waters. This stream flows to the north for a little over than 10km, but mixes with a reduced, organic-rich, high pH waste water from the municipal waste water pools of the village. This water input produces two different results in the chemistry of the stream depending upon the season: (i) in the winter season, effective water mixing takes place, and the flux of acid water from the mine dumps is continuous, resulting in the immediate precipitation of the Fe from the acid waters; (ii) during the summer season, acid drainage is interrupted and only the waste water feeds the stream, resulting in the reductive dissolution of Fe hydroxides and hydroxysulfates in the stream sediments, releasing significant quantities of metals into solution. Throughout the year, water pH stays invariably within 4.0–4.5 for several meters downstream of this mixing zone even when the source waters come from the waste water pools, which have a pH around 8.4. The coupled interplay of dissolution and precipitation of the secondary minerals (hydroxides and sulfates), keeps the system pH between 3.9 and 4.5 all along the stream. In particular, evidence suggests that schwertmannite may be precipitating and later decomposing into Fe hydroxides to sustain the stream water pH at those levels. While Fe content decreases by 50% from solution, the most important trace metals are only slightly attenuated before the solution mixes with the Ribeira do Rôxo stream waters. Concentrations of As are the only ones effectively reduced along the flow path. Partitioning of Cu, Zn and Pb in the contaminated sediments also showed different behavior. Specific/non-specific adsorption is relevant for Cu and Zn in the upstream branch of Ribeira da Água Forte with acid drainage conditions, whereas the mixture with the waste water causes that the association of these metals with oxyhydroxide to be more important. Metals bound to oxyhydroxides are on the order of 60–70% for Pb, 50% for Cu and 30–60% for Zn. Organic matter is only marginally important around the waste water input area showing 2–8% Cu bound to this phase. These results also show that, although the mixing process of both acid and organic-rich waters can suppress and briefly mitigate some adverse effects of acid drainage, the continuing discharge of these waste waters into a dry stream promotes the remobilization of metals fixed in the secondary solid phases in the stream bed back into solution, a situation that can hardly be amended back to its original state.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Overview of groundwater sources and water-supply systems, and associated microbial pollution, in Finland, Norway and Iceland | Aperçu des ressources en eau souterraine et des systèmes d’approvisionnement en eau, et pollution microbienne associée, en Finlande, Norvège et Islande Visión general de las fuentes de agua subterránea y de los sistemas de abastecimiento de agua, y la contaminación microbiana asociada, en Finlandia, Noruega e Islandia 芬兰、挪威和冰岛地下水源、供水系统以及相关微生物污染的回顾 Panorâma das fontes de águas subterrâneas e sistemas de abastecimento de água, e poluição microbiana associada, na Finlândia, Noruega e Islândia Texte intégral
2017
Kløve, B. (Bjørn) | Kvitsand, Hanne Margrethe Lund | Pitkänen, Tarja | Gunnarsdottir, Maria J. | Gaut, Sylvi | Gardarsson, Sigurdur M. | Rossi, Pekka M. | Miettinen, Ilkka
The characteristics of groundwater systems and groundwater contamination in Finland, Norway and Iceland are presented, as they relate to outbreaks of disease. Disparities among the Nordic countries in the approach to providing safe drinking water from groundwater are discussed, and recommendations are given for the future. Groundwater recharge is typically high in autumn or winter months or after snowmelt in the coldest regions. Most inland aquifers are unconfined and therefore vulnerable to pollution, but they are often without much anthropogenic influence and the water quality is good. In coastal zones, previously emplaced marine sediments may confine and protect aquifers to some extent. However, the water quality in these aquifers is highly variable, as the coastal regions are also most influenced by agriculture, sea-water intrusion and urban settlements resulting in challenging conditions for water abstraction and supply. Groundwater is typically extracted from Quaternary deposits for small and medium municipalities, from bedrock for single households, and from surface water for the largest cities, except for Iceland, which relies almost entirely on groundwater for public supply. Managed aquifer recharge, with or without prior water treatment, is widely used in Finland to extend present groundwater resources. Especially at small utilities, groundwater is often supplied without treatment. Despite generally good water quality, microbial contamination has occurred, principally by norovirus and Campylobacter, with larger outbreaks resulting from sewage contamination, cross-connections into drinking water supplies, heavy rainfall events, and ingress of polluted surface water to groundwater.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Estudio de la eficiencia de uso de agua y luz en el cultivo de papa (Solanum tuberosum L.) en dos estaciones astronomicas contrastantes (verano e invierno).
1992
Trebejo Varillas I.
Impact of recharge water temperature on bioclogging during managed aquifer recharge: a laboratory study | Impact de la température de l’eau de recharge sur le biocolmatage lors d’une recharge artificielle d’un aquifère: étude en laboratoire Impacto de la temperatura del agua de recarga en la obstrucción biológica durante la recarga de un acuífero con manejo: un estudio de laboratorio 回灌水温度对人工回灌含水层微生物堵塞的影响:室内研究 Impacto da temperatura da água de recarga na biocolmatação durante gerenciamento da recarga do aquífero: um estudo de laboratório Texte intégral
2018
Xia, Lu | Gao, Zongjun | Zheng, Xilai | Wei, Jiuchuan
To investigate the effect of recharge water temperature on bioclogging processes and mechanisms during seasonal managed aquifer recharge (MAR), two groups of laboratory percolation experiments were conducted: a winter test and a summer test. The temperatures were controlled at ~5±2 and ~15±3 °C, and the tests involved bacterial inoculums acquired from well water during March 2014 and August 2015, for the winter and summer tests, respectively. The results indicated that the sand columns clogged ~10 times faster in the summer test due to a 10-fold larger bacterial growth rate. The maximum concentrations of total extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) in the winter test were approximately twice those in the summer test, primarily caused by a ~200 μg/g sand increase of both loosely bound EPS (LB-EPS) and tightly bound EPS (TB-EPS). In the first half of the experimental period, the accumulation of bacteria cells and EPS production induced rapid bioclogging in both the winter and summer tests. Afterward, increasing bacterial growth dominated the bioclogging in the summer test, while the accumulation of LB-EPS led to further bioclogging in the winter test. The biological analysis determined that the dominant bacteria in experiments for both seasons were different and the bacterial community diversity was ~50% higher in the winter test than that for summer. The seasonal inoculums could lead to differences in the bacterial community structure and diversity, while recharge water temperature was considered to be a major factor influencing the bacterial growth rate and metabolism behavior during the seasonal bioclogging process.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Surface water–groundwater interaction and chemistry in a mineral-armored hydrothermal outflow channel, Yellowstone National Park, USA | Chimie et interactions entres eaux de surface et souterraines dans un chenal de surverse hydrothermal à cuirasse minérale, Parc National de Yellowstone, USA Interacción agua superficial–agua subterránea y química en un canal hidrotermal de salida mineralizado, Parque Nacional Yellowstone, USA 美国黄石国家公园地表水—地下水相互作用和热水河床矿物沉积的化学特征 Interacção águas superficiais–águas subterrâneas e química num canal de descarga hidrotermal blindado por minerais, Parque Nacional de Yellowstone, EUA Texte intégral
2008
Vitale, M.V. | Gardner, P. | Hinman, N.W.
Small quantities of groundwater interact with hydrothermal surface water to drive in-stream geochemical processes in a silica-armored hot-spring outflow channel in Yellowstone National Park, USA. The objective of this study was to characterize the hydrology and geochemistry of this unique system in order to (1) learn more about the Yellowstone Plateau’s subsurface water mixing between meteoric and hydrothermal waters and (2) learn more about the chemical and physical processes that lead to accumulation of streambed cements, i.e., streambed armor. A combination of hydrological, geochemical, mineralogical, microscopic, and petrographic techniques were used to identify groundwater and surface-water exchange. Interaction could be identified in winter because of differences in surface water and groundwater composition but interaction at other times of the year cannot be ruled out. Dissolved constituents originating from groundwater (e.g., Fe(II) and Mg) were traced downstream until oxidation and/or subsequent precipitation with silica removed them, particularly where high affinity substrates like cyanobacterial surfaces were present. Because the stream lies in a relatively flat drainage basin and is fed mainly by a seasonally relatively stable hot spring, this system allowed study of the chemical processes along a stream without the obscuring effects of sedimentation.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Delineation of spatial-temporal patterns of groundwater/surface-water interaction along a river reach (Aa River, Belgium) with transient thermal modeling | Délimitation des modalités spatio-temporelles d’interactions entre eaux souterraines et eaux de surface le long d’une rivière (rivière Aa, Belgique) à l’aide d’une modélisation thermique en régime transitoire Delimitación de los patrones espacio-temporales de la interacción agua subterránea/agua superficial a lo largo de un río (Aa River, Bélgica) con un modelado térmico transitorio 采用瞬时热建模描述沿河段(比利时Aa河)地下水-地表水相互作用时空模式 Delineamento de padrões espaço-temporais de interação águas subterrâneas/águas superficiais ao longo de um trecho de rio (Rio Aa, Bélgica) com modelagem termal transiente Texte intégral
2018
Anibas, Christian | Tolche, AbebeDebele | Ghysels, Gert | Nossent, Jiri | Schneidewind, Uwe | Huysmans, Marijke | Batelaan, Okke
Among the advances made in analytical and numerical analysis methods to quantify groundwater/surface-water interaction, one methodology that stands out is the use of heat as an environmental tracer. A large data set of river and riverbed temperature profiles from the Aa River in Belgium has been used to examine the spatial-temporal variations of groundwater/surface-water interaction. Exchange fluxes were calculated with the numerical heat-transport code STRIVE. The code was applied in transient mode to overcome previous limitations of steady-state analysis, and allowed for the calculation of model quality. In autumn and winter the mean exchange fluxes reached −90 mm d⁻¹, while in spring and early summer fluxes were −42 mm d⁻¹. Predominantly gaining conditions occurred along the river reach; however, in a few areas the direction of flow changed in time. The river banks showed elevated fluxes up to a factor of 3 compared to the center of the river. Higher fluxes were detected in the upstream section of the reach. Due to the influence of exchange fluxes along the river banks, larger temporal variations were found in the downstream section. The exchange fluxes at the river banks seemed more driven by variable local exchange flows, while the center of the river was dominated by deep and steady regional groundwater flows. These spatial and temporal differences in groundwater/surface-water exchange show the importance of long-term investigations on the driving forces of hyporheic processes across different scales.
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