4.7 Article

Constraining modern and historical recharge from bore hydrographs, 3H, 14C and chloride concentrations:: Applications to dual-porosity aquifers in dryland salinity areas, Murray Basin, Australia

Journal

JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY
Volume 332, Issue 1-2, Pages 69-92

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2006.06.034

Keywords

recharge; H-3; C-14; salinity; dual porosity

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Water table fluctuations and renewal rates based on H-3 and C-14 concentrations in bores screened within 5 m of the water table were used to estimate recharge rates in five dry land salinity areas in northern Victoria, Australia. Given the resolution of each technique both methods yield broadly similar results of 4-90 mm/yr (up to 14% of modern rainfall) that reflect the recharge rates following land clearing over the last 200 years. Deeper bores show mixing of modern recharge with older water flowing laterally through the aquifers. Recharge estimates based on Cl concentrations are up to two orders of magnitude lower (< 1 mm/yr), implying that they largely reflect pre-land clearing recharge rates, as is the case elsewhere in the Murray Basin. Recharge rates are similar across the areas from upper slopes to plains, indicating that recharge occurs across substantial areas of each catchment. This is also implied by bore hydrographs in all parts of the flow systems being in phase, the presence of H-3 in groundwater from across the area, and seasonal variations in salinity and delta O-18 values in groundwater from water table bores. Since recharge occurs across broad areas, any attempts to slow the rate of water table rise requires management of the landscape as a whole, not just the uplands. That the increased recharge since land clearing has not lowered groundwater salinity is due to the system having dual porosity, where older saline water trapped in clays within the unsaturated zone is slowly incorporated into the groundwater as the water table rises. (c) 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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