Simulation and consequences of successive anthropogenic activity in the Agua Amarga coastal aquifer (southeast Spain) |
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Authors: | I. Alhama Manteca |
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Affiliation: | 1. Network Simulation Research Group (Applied Physics Department), UPCT, Paseo Alfonso XIII 50 , E-30201 , Cartagena , Spain simulacion.redes@upct.es |
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Abstract: | Abstract The Agua Amarga coastal aquifer has been the object of a succession of anthropogenic interventions over the last 90 years: (a) the operation of saltworks from 1925 to 1975; (b) the withdrawal, since 2003, of groundwater from the aquifer along the coast line; and (c) the programme of pouring seawater over the salt marsh, carried out since 2009, to recover the piezometric levels and the soil moisture conditions. For a better understanding of how these past and present human activities have affected the natural groundwater regime, and to validate certain hypotheses concerning the interpretation of experimental data on temperature depth profiles and piezometric and salinity changes, a numerical fluid flow and solute transport model was designed and applied to the period 1925–2010, using SEAWAT. This model reproduces, in a qualitative and quantitative way, the flow and transport processes that operated during this time, as well as the behaviour of the seawater wedge. Citation Alhama Manteca, I., 2013. Simulation and consequences of successive anthropogenic activity in the Agua Amarga coastal aquifer (southeast Spain). Hydrological Sciences Journal, 58 (5), 1072–1087. Editor D. Koutsoyiannis |
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Keywords: | coastal aquifer saltworks salt marsh desalination plants SEAWAT model |
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