scholarly journals Interaction of ground and surface water in Khabarovsk water node area

2021 ◽  
Vol 44 (2) ◽  
pp. 151-158
Author(s):  
V. V. Kulakov ◽  
R. S. Shtengelov ◽  
D. V. Matveenko

This research presents the results of long-term monitoring of groundwater levels within the Khabarovsk water node in the Amur and Tunguska interfluve on the area of the Middle Amur artesian basin in the aquifer of Pliocene-Lower Quaternary alluvial deposits. Observations have been carried out on 9 groups of wells of external monitoring and 5 groups of wells of internal monitoring at the Tunguska reservoir, with a depth of 3 observation wells in the group from 15 to 50 m. The interaction parameters of groundwater and the Pemzenskaya channel have been specified for the period from 2012 to 2020. When the channel causes groundwater afflux during the flood, the average value of the equivalent length parameter ∆L is 40 m for the upper level of the aquifer, 87 m – for the middle level, and it is 605 m for the lower level. Vertical water exchange in the productive strata in the shore zone of the channel is characterized by the values of the overflow coefficient of 0.136 days-1 between the upper and middle observation levels and 0.0116 days-1 between the middle and lower levels.

Author(s):  
K. Furuno ◽  
A. Kagawa ◽  
O. Kazaoka ◽  
T. Kusuda ◽  
H. Nirei

Abstract. Over 40 million people live on and exploit the groundwater resources of the Kanto Plain. The Plain encompasses metropolitan Tokyo and much of Chiba Prefecture. Useable groundwater extends to the base of the Kanto Plain, some 2500 to 3000 m below sea level. Much of the Kanto Plain surface is at sea level. By the early 1970s, with increasing urbanization and industrial expansion, local overdraft of groundwater resources caused major ground subsidence and damage to commercial and residential structures as well as to local and regional infrastructure. Parts of the lowlands around Tokyo subsided to 4.0 m below sea level; particularly affected were the suburbs of Funabashi and Gyotoku in western Chiba. In the southern Kanto Plain, regulations, mainly by local government and later by regional agencies, led to installation of about 500 monitoring wells and almost 5000 bench marks by the 1990's. Many of them are still working with new monitoring system. Long-term monitoring is important. The monitoring systems are costly, but the resulting data provide continuous measurement of the "health" of the Kanto Groundwater Basin, and thus permit sustainable use of the groundwater resource.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Trong Ahn Vu ◽  
Marie Larocque ◽  
Sylvain Gagné ◽  
Marc-André Bourgault

<p>Groundwater represents an important source of drinking water for 25% of the population in the province of Quebec (Canada) and for 80% of its rural population. The deployment of the Quebec Groundwater Observation Network (Réseau de suivi des eaux souterraines du Québec – RSESQ) since the start of the millennia provides important data on the dynamics of piezometric heads throughout southern Quebec. This study aims to use the wealth of available groundwater data available to better understand the resilience of groundwater resources to changes in meteorological and hydrological conditions. The study area is located between the St. Lawrence River and the Canada-USA border, and between the Quebec-Ontario border and Quebec City (36,000 km²). Available data consist of groundwater level time series from 81 observation wells (2000-2018; 43 in confined aquifers, 15 in semi-confined aquifers and 23 in unconfined aquifers), total flow rates from 179 hydrometric stations (1960-2017), and meteorological data from a spatially interpolated 10 km x 10 km grid (1960-2017). Statistical analyses (Mann Kendall and Sen’s slope) were used to understand if groundwater levels and flow rates are declining or rising, what is their short-, medium- and long-term memory and what are the geomorphological, land use, and climate controls of this reactivity. The results show that groundwater levels since 2007 exhibit statistically significant negative annual trends for most observation wells. Since 1960, river flow rates, total precipitation and air temperature all show significant increases. Trends calculated on five-year sliding windows confirm that groundwater levels and river flow rates are significantly correlated to the climate indices Southern Oscillation index (SOI), NINO-3 and Pacific Decadal Oscillation index (PDO). Autocorrelations of flow rates and groundwater level data indicate that rivers and aquifers have a short hydrological memory rarely extending beyond the hydrological year. Cross-correlations of flow rates and groundwater levels with temperature show high correlation coefficients with a lag of up to 60 days, indicating a season-long effect of temperature changes. As expected, cross-correlation analysis of the two data sets with precipitation shows smaller correlation coefficients and a shorter reaction time (10 days). Standard deviations of daily groundwater levels are significantly higher in shallower wells and in wells where groundwater levels are closer to the ground. This confirms the presence of highly dynamic shallow aquifers reacting rapidly to surface processes.  Analyses are under way to test if spatially distributed parameters (e.g., geological setting, slope, land use) and well-related parameters (e.g.: depth, confined or unconfined) are explaining factors of trends and variations in groundwater levels and flow rates. One key observation from this study is that the RSESQ is highly valuable to understand groundwater dynamics and should be maintained on a long-term horizon. This detailed analysis has allowed to identify external influences (e.g., pumping) on some observation wells that do not reflect natural conditions and could be removed from the observation network. Recommendations also include the need for new observation wells in specific locations to improve the representativity of groundwater flow conditions in the study area.</p>


Author(s):  
Barbara S. Minsker ◽  
Charles Davis ◽  
David Dougherty ◽  
Gus Williams

Author(s):  
Robert Klinck ◽  
Ben Bradshaw ◽  
Ruby Sandy ◽  
Silas Nabinacaboo ◽  
Mannie Mameanskum ◽  
...  

The Naskapi Nation of Kawawachikamach is an Aboriginal community located in northern Quebec near the Labrador Border. Given the region’s rich iron deposits, the Naskapi Nation has considerable experience with major mineral development, first in the 1950s to the 1980s, and again in the past decade as companies implement plans for further extraction. This has raised concerns regarding a range of environmental and socio-economic impacts that may be caused by renewed development. These concerns have led to an interest among the Naskapi to develop a means to track community well-being over time using indicators of their own design. Exemplifying community-engaged research, this paper describes the beginning development of such a tool in fall 2012—the creation of a baseline of community well-being against which mining-induced change can be identified. Its development owes much to the remarkable and sustained contribution of many key members of the Naskapi Nation. If on-going surveying is completed based on the chosen indicators, the Nation will be better positioned to recognize shifts in its well-being and to communicate these shifts to its partners. In addition, long-term monitoring will allow the Naskapi Nation to contribute to more universal understanding of the impacts of mining for Indigenous peoples.


Kerntechnik ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 83 (6) ◽  
pp. 513-522 ◽  
Author(s):  
U. Hampel ◽  
A. Kratzsch ◽  
R. Rachamin ◽  
M. Wagner ◽  
S. Schmidt ◽  
...  

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