4.5 Article

Impacts of urbanization on groundwater hydrodynamics and hydrochemistry of the Toluca Valley aquifer (Mexico)

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING AND ASSESSMENT
Volume 186, Issue 5, Pages 2979-2999

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10661-013-3595-3

Keywords

Groundwater; Urbanization; Subsidence; Pollution; Factor analysis

Funding

  1. Universidad Autonoma del Estado de Mexico [2600/2008U]
  2. Consejo Nacional de Investigacion y Ciencia (CONACyT)

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The Toluca Valley is located on the high plains of Mexico, where there are significant industrial zones and large populations. Water needs are almost exclusively met by groundwater, which has brought about intense exploitation of the aquifer and indication of some contamination. The present study investigates the effect of urbanization, related to industrialization of the region, on groundwater in the central portion of the Toluca Valley aquifer-a zone with high population density and where the largest industrial park is located. A general decline in the groundwater level has been found over the years, at a rate of as much as 2.5 m/year. The appearance of a large drawdown cone was identified, indicating changes in the direction of groundwater flow. Also identified was the presence of several ground fissures, the location of which coincided with the drawdown cone. In hydrochemical terms, the water type is sodium-magnesium bicarbonate and this characteristic has not changed over time, although it has been possible to detect the presence of larger quantities of sulfates (up to 117 mg/L) and nitrates (up to 47 mg/L) in recent years, likely associated with contamination from industrial and urban wastewater. Factor analysis made it possible to identify ions that would characterize natural processes involving the acquisition of salts (HCO3-, Na+, Mg2+, and Si), as well as anthropic activities (SO42-, NO3-, Cl-, Ca2+, and K+).

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