Abstract
This research examines the interrelations in a complex hydrogeological system, consisting of a multi-layered coastal aquifer, the sea, and a surface reservoir (fish ponds) and the importance of the specific connection between the aquifer and the sea. The paper combines offshore geophysical surveys (CHIRP) and on land TDEM (Time Domain Electro Magnetic), together with hydrological measurements and numerical simulation. The Quaternary aquifer at the southern Carmel plain is sub-divided into three units, a sandy phreatic unit, and two calcareous sandstone ('Kurkar') confined units. The salinity in the different units is affected by their connection with the sea. We show that differences in the seaward extent of its clayey roof, as illustrated in the CHIRP survey, result in a varying extent of seawater intrusion due to pumping from the confined units. FEFLOW simulations indicate that the FSI (Fresh Saline water Interface) reached the coastline just a few years after pumping has begun, where the roof terminates ~100 m from shore, while no seawater intrusion occurred in an area where the roof is continuous farther offshore. This was found to be consistent with borehole observations and TDEM data from our study sites. The water level in the coastal aquifer was generally stable with surprisingly no indication for significant seawater intrusion although the aquifer is extensively pumped very close to shore. This is explained by contribution from the underlying Late Cretaceous aquifer, which increased with the pumping rate, as is also indicated by the numerical simulations.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 1426 |
| Journal | Water (Switzerland) |
| Volume | 10 |
| Issue number | 10 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - 11 Oct 2018 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© 2018 by the authors.
Funding
This project was partly funded by a Water Authority of Israel grant 4500445470 and by a USAID MERC grant M29-073. We are grateful to people from the Geological Survey of Israel for their support: to Halel Lutzki for the field tests, to Iyad Swaed for his help with the new wells, to Haim Hemo for the EC profiles, to Nili Almog and Bat-Sheva Cohem for their help in drawing the figures. Thanks to Yehuda Shalem and the Radon laboratory team in the HU for the help in the Radon sampling and analyzing. We are grateful to Eldad Levi from the Geophysical Institute for the support in the TDEM survey and to Aric Golan from the IOLR to the support with the CHIRP survey and the seismic interpretation. Thanks to Einat Magal for the help with the "Point dilution test" and to Yossi Berchman from Maagan Michael for their cooperation.
| Funders | Funder number |
|---|---|
| United States Agency for International Development | M29-073 |
Keywords
- Fish ponds
- Multi-layered coastal aquifer
- Numerical model
- Offshore geophysics
- Sea-aquifer relations
- Seawater intrusion
- Tidal signal
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