4.7 Article

Investigation of the geochemical evolution of groundwater under agricultural land: A case study in northeastern Mexico

Journal

JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY
Volume 521, Issue -, Pages 410-423

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2014.12.026

Keywords

Carbonate aquifers; Water-rock interaction; Geochemical models; Nitrate pollution; Dedolomitization; Mexico

Funding

  1. UCMEXUS-CONACyT fund [CN-08-222]
  2. Chair for Sustainable Water Use (Tecnologico de Monterrey)

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Zona Citricola is an important area for Mexico due to its citriculture activity. Situated in a sub-humid to humid climate adjacent to the Sierra Madre Oriental, this valley hosts an aquifer system that represents sequences of shales, marls, conglomerates, and alluvial deposits. Groundwater flows from mountainous recharge areas to the basin-fill deposits and provides base flows to supply drinking water to the adjacent metropolitan area of Monterrey. Recent studies examining the groundwater quality of the study area urge the mitigation of groundwater pollution. The objective of this study was to characterize the physical and chemical properties of the groundwater and to assess the processes controlling the groundwater's chemistry. Correlation was used to identify associations among various geochemical constituents. Factor analysis was applied to identify the water's chemical characteristics that were responsible for generating most of the variability within the dataset. Hierarchical cluster analysis was employed in combination with a post-hoc analysis of variance to partition the water samples into hydrochemical water groups: recharge waters (Ca-HCO3), transition zone waters (Ca-HCO3-SO4 to Ca-SO4-HCO3) and discharge waters (Ca-SO4). Inverse geochemical models of these groups were developed and constrained using PHREEQC to elucidate the chemical reactions controlling the water's chemistry between an initial (recharge) and final water. The primary reactions contributing to salinity were the following: (1) water-rock interactions, including the weathering of evaporitic rocks and dedolomitization; (2) dissolution of soil gas carbon dioxide; and (3) input from animal/human wastewater and manure in combination with by denitrification processes. Contributions from silicate weathering to salinity ranged from less important to insignificant. The findings suggest that it may not be cost-effective to regulate manure application to mitigate groundwater pollution. (C) 2014 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V.

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