Re-evaluating dual-porosity effects at the site of a seminal groundwater modelling study: Tilmanstone, southern England

Author:

Watson S. J.1,Burgess W. G.2,Barker J. A.3

Affiliation:

1. ATKINS, Woodcote Grove, Ashley Road, Epsom KT18 5BW, UK

2. Department of Earth Sciences, University College London, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT, UK

3. School of Civil Engineering and the Environment, University of Southampton, Highfield, Southampton SO17 1BJ, UK

Abstract

AbstractThe first numerical model of solute transport to incorporate Fickian diffusive exchange between mobile fracture water and immobile porewater for an actual case of groundwater contamination at catchment scale was applied to the Chalk aquifer at Tilmanstone in SE England by Bibby (Water Resources Research, 1981, 17, 1075–1081). The unconfined aquifer at Tilmanstone had been contaminated by coalfield brine leaking from disposal lagoons operating throughout much of the twentieth century. Recent observations show that the Bibby model underestimates dual-porosity diffusive retardation, and hence underestimates the persistence of contamination, probably by several decades. 2D representation of the aquifer in plan ignored the hydrostratigraphy, and model calibration was limited by the lack of time-variant paired profiles of fracture water and porewater. Vertical profiles through the Chalk determined by packer testing, borehole dilution testing and geophysical logging, together with a new depth profile of chloride concentration in Chalk matrix porewater, are described. The hydrostratigraphy is interpreted in relation to the Chalk lithostratigraphy of SE England, and incorporated into a vertical-section model of chloride transport along the axis of the valley, consistent with the new and historical profiles of fracture water and porewater chloride concentrations. New predictions of the longevity of the chloride contamination at Tilmanstone are presented.

Publisher

Geological Society of London

Subject

Geology,Ocean Engineering,Water Science and Technology

Reference31 articles.

1. Allen D. J. Brewerton L. J. (1997) The Physical Properties of Major Aquifers in England and Wales, British Geological Survey Technical Report, WD/97/34 (Environment Agency R&D Publication), 8.

2. Atkinson T. Ward R. Hannelly E. (2000) in Tracers and Modelling in Hydrogeology, Proceedings of the TraM’2000 Conference held at Liege Belgium, May 2000, A radial flow tracer test in chalk: comparison of models and fitted parameters, International Association of Hydrological Science Publications, ed Dassargues A. (IAHS, Wallingford), 262.

3. Barker J. (2003) in The Hydrogeology of the Chalk of North-West Europe, Modelling groundwater flow and transport in the Chalk, eds Downing R. Price M. Jones G. (Clarendon Press, Oxford), pp 58–66.

4. Block-geometry functions characterizing transport in densely fissured media

5. A pulsed-velocity method of solute transport modelling;Barker,2000

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