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Impact of changing climate and land use on the hydrogeology of southeast Australia

Journal

AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF EARTH SCIENCES
Volume 55, Issue 8, Pages 1009-1021

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/08120090802266535

Keywords

climate change; global warming; groundwater; Murray Basin; recharge

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council
  2. Melbourne and Monash Universities

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Anthropogenic climate change is the Earth's most serious large-scale environmental concern. While the projected changes of global temperatures, rainfall and surface water have been modelled in a sophisticated manner, the impact on groundwater resources is much less well constrained. In southeast Australia, the decrease in rainfall amount and an increase in temperature that are predicted by climate models are generally assumed to reduce the amount of recharge to the groundwater systems. However, the increase in recharge that has resulted from clearing of the native vegetation will almost certainly produce a greater impact on the groundwater system, increasing quantity and potentially improving quality. Additionally, the impact on recharge of changes to rainfall frequency rather than just total amount is not well documented. Overall our understanding of the impacts of climate change on groundwater systems is insufficiently advanced to make firm predictions. Indirect impacts of climate change, particularly the projected increased demand for groundwater or surface water to supplement surface water supplies also will have a major impact that may be greater than the direct effect of climate change.

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