Development of spatial permeability variations in English Chalk aquifers

Author:

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

Affiliation:

1. Worthington Groundwater, 55 Mayfair Avenue, Dundas, Ontario L9H 3K9, Canada

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

Abstract

AbstractThe Cretaceous Chalk in England forms dual-porosity aquifers, with low-permeability matrix and high-permeability networks of fissures, which are predominantly stress-relief fractures that have been enlarged by dissolution. This enlargement is a function of the volume of water that has passed along a fracture (the flowrate effect) and its degree of chemical undersaturation. Feedback effects result in the development of a distinctive permeability structure, with four particular characteristics: (i) troughs in the water table with high transmissivity and convergent groundwater flow; (ii) substantial increases in transmissivities in a downgradient direction; (iii) downgradient decreases in hydraulic gradient; and (iv) discharge from the high-transmissivity zones to the surface commonly at substantial springs. This distinctive self-organized permeability structure occurs throughout unconfined chalk aquifers. Early enlargement of fissures at a depth of 50–100 m below the water table is slow, but is much more rapid close to the water table and in the uppermost bedrock due to non-linear dissolution kinetics. A modelled dissolution profile shows that more than 95% of dissolution takes place in the top 1 m of bedrock, and that enlargement of fissures in the saturated zone results from progressive dissolution occurring over a period of a million years or more.

Publisher

Geological Society of London

Subject

Geology,Ocean Engineering,Water Science and Technology

Reference55 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 , 312.

2. Regional trends in matrix porosity and dry density of the Chalk of England

3. Modeling fracture porosity development using simple growth laws

4. Corrosion by mixing of karst waters;Transactions of the Cave Research Group of Great Britain,1971

5. Brenchley P.J. and Rawson P.F. (eds) 2006. The Geology of England and Wales. Geological Society, London.

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