Affiliation:
1. College of Science and Engineering, National Centre for Groundwater Research and Training (NCGRT) Flinders University P.O. Box 2100 Adelaide South Australia 5001 Australia
2. College of Science and Engineering, Discipline of Mathematics Flinders University P.O. Box 2100 Adelaide South Australia 5001 Australia
3. School of Earth Sciences University of Western Australia (M004) 35 Stirling Highway Crawley Western Australia 6009 Australia
4. De Grey Mining Ltd PO Box 84 West Perth Western Australia 6872 Australia
Abstract
AbstractOpen pit mining frequently requires regional water tables to be lowered to access ore deposits. When mines close, dewatering ceases allowing the water table to recover. In arid and semi‐arid mining regions, the developing pit lakes are predominantly fed by groundwater during this recovery phase and pit lakes develop first into “terminal sinks” for the surrounding groundwater system. With time, the re‐establishment of regional hydraulic gradients can cause pit lakes to develop into throughflow systems, in which pit lake water outflows into adjacent aquifers. In this study, we use numerical groundwater modeling to aid process understanding of how regional hydraulic gradients, aquifer properties, net evaporation rates, and pit geometry determine the hydraulic evolution of groundwater‐fed pit lakes. We find that before the recovery of the regional water table to its new equilibrium, pit lakes frequently transition to throughflow systems. Throughflow from pit lakes to downstream aquifers can develop within two decades following cessation of dewatering even under low hydraulic gradients (e.g., 5 × 10−4) or high net evaporation rates (e.g., 2.5 m/year). Pit lakes remain terminal sinks only under suitable combinations of high evaporation rates, low hydraulic gradients, and low hydraulic conductivities. In addition, we develop an approximate analytical solution for a rapid assessment of the hydraulic status of pit lakes under steady‐state conditions. Understanding whether pit lakes remain terminal sinks or transition into throughflow systems largely determines the long‐term water quality of pit lakes and downstream aquifers. This knowledge is fundamental for mine closure and planning post‐mining land use.
Funder
Australian Research Council
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