4.5 Article

Groundwater salinization of the Sfax superficial aquifer, Tunisia

Journal

HYDROGEOLOGY JOURNAL
Volume 15, Issue 7, Pages 1341-1355

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10040-007-0182-0

Keywords

coastal aquifers; salinization; hydrochemistry; Tunisia

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Groundwater salinization has become a crucial environmental problem worldwide and is considered the most widespread form of groundwater contamination. The origin of salinity in the coastal aquifer of the Sfax Basin, Tunisia was investigated by means of chemical analyses of groundwater samples from 65 wells. The groundwater samples present a clear gradation from calcium sulphate salinization to that of sodium chloride. The saturation indices for calcite and gypsum, and binary diagrams of different ions, together with multivariate analysis, indicate the existence of various salinization processes such as: dissolution of gypsum and calcite dispersed through the reservoir rock; ion exchange; intensive agricultural practices that produce effluents that infiltrate to the saturated zone; and sea-water intrusion, enhanced by excessive withdrawal of groundwater.

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