Patterns in groundwater chemistry resulting from groundwater flow |
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Authors: | Pieter J. Stuyfzand |
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Affiliation: | (1) Kiwa N.V. Research and Consultancy, Groningenhaven 7, P.O. Box 1072, 3430 BB Nieuwegein, the Netherlands Fax: +31-30-6061-165 e-mail: stuyfzan@kiwaoa.nl, NL |
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Abstract: | ![]() Groundwater flow influences hydrochemical patterns because flow reduces mixing by diffusion, carries the chemical imprints of biological and anthropogenic changes in the recharge area, and leaches the aquifer system. Global patterns are mainly dictated by differences in the flux of meteoric water passing through the subsoil. Within individual hydrosomes (water bodies with a specific origin), the following prograde evolution lines (facies sequence) normally develop in the direction of groundwater flow: from strong to no fluctuations in water quality, from polluted to unpolluted, from acidic to basic, from oxic to anoxic–methanogenic, from no to significant base exchange, and from fresh to brackish. This is demonstrated for fresh coastal-dune groundwater in the Netherlands. In this hydrosome, the leaching of calcium carbonate as much as 15 m and of adsorbed marine cations (Na+, K+, and Mg2+) as much as 2500 m in the flow direction is shown to correspond with about 5000 yr of flushing since the beach barrier with dunes developed. Recharge focus areas in the dunes are evidenced by groundwater displaying a lower prograde quality evolution than the surrounding dune groundwater. Artificially recharged Rhine River water in the dunes provides distinct hydrochemical patterns, which display groundwater flow, mixing, and groundwater ages. Received, May 1998 · Revised, August 1998 · Accepted, October 1998 |
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Keywords: | hydrochemistry groundwater the Netherlands salt-water/fresh-water relations paleohydrology |
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