Advances in conceptualizing transport in chalk aquifers

Author:

Foley Aidan E.1ORCID,Worthington Stephen R. H.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Mott MacDonald Ltd, 1 Whitehall Riverside, Leeds LS1 4BN, UK

2. Worthington Groundwater, 55 Mayfair Avenue, Dundas, Ontario, Canada

Abstract

AbstractThe conceptualizations of matrix, fracture and fissure porosity are important for understanding relative controls on storage and flow of groundwater, and the transport of solutes (and non-aqueous phase liquids) within chalk aquifers. However, these different types of porosity, rather than being entirely distinct, represent elements in a continuum of void sizes contributing to the total porosity of the aquifer. Here we define such a continuum and critically examine the selection of appropriate values of effective porosity, a widely used parameter for mass transport modelling in aquifers. Effective porosity is a transient phenomenon, related to the porosity continuum by the timescales under which mass transport occurs. An analysis of 55 tracer tests and 20 well inflow tests in English Chalk aquifers identifies spatial scaling in groundwater velocity and groundwater flow respectively, which are interpreted within the context of the wider literature on carbonate aquifers globally. We advance transport modelling in the Chalk by developing a fissure aperture velocity mapping method using transmissivity data from existing regional groundwater models, together with the identified transient and spatial scaling phenomena. The results show that chalk aquifers exhibit widespread rapid groundwater flow which may transport contaminants rapidly in almost any setting.

Publisher

Geological Society of London

Subject

Geology,Ocean Engineering,Water Science and Technology

Reference88 articles.

1. Adams B. (ed.) 2008. The Chalk aquifer of the North Downs. British Geological Survey Research Report, RR/08/02.

2. Allen D.J. 1995. Permeability and fractures in the English chalk: a review of the hydrogeological literature. British Geological Survey, Hydrogeology Series Technical Report, WD/95/43.

3. Allen D.J. and Crane E.J. (eds) 2019. The Chalk aquifer of the Wessex Basin. British Geological Survey Research Report, RR/11/02 .

4. 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 , 312. Environment Agency R&D Publication 8.

5. The impact of geological control on flow accretion in lowland permeable catchments;Hydrology Research,2009

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