Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Tweed S., Leblanc M., Cartwright I., Favreau Guillaume, Leduc Christian. (2011). Arid zone groundwater recharge and salinisation processes ; an example from the Lake Eyre Basin, Australia. Journal of Hydrology, 408 (3-4), p. 257-275. ISSN 0022-1694.

Titre du document
Arid zone groundwater recharge and salinisation processes ; an example from the Lake Eyre Basin, Australia
Année de publication
2011
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000295994900007
Auteurs
Tweed S., Leblanc M., Cartwright I., Favreau Guillaume, Leduc Christian
Source
Journal of Hydrology, 2011, 408 (3-4), p. 257-275 ISSN 0022-1694
In arid central Australia, the similar to 1.14 M km(2) endorheic Lake Eyre Basin (LEB) experiences sporadic floods, and contains saline shallow groundwater. In this basin, where on-ground physical and chemical data are very sparse, new observations of major ion chemistry, stable isotopes (delta H-2, delta O-18, delta C-13), radiogenic isotopes (H-3, C-14) and remote sensing (MODIS) data were used to investigate groundwater recharge and salinisation processes in 2006-2007. In January 2007 there was a large and intense local rainfall event, followed by flooding to the normally dry Lake Eyre resulting from heavy rainfall in the northern LEB that took similar to 2 months to arrive at Lake Eyre. Groundwater chemistry from this study show no evidence of recharge from the floodwaters or the local rainfall; however this does not preclude the process. Low transit times and low infiltrating volumes may mean that the recharge event has not yet been detected. Over the longer term, the stable isotope chemistry indicates that groundwater is predominantly diffusely recharged during heavy local rainfall events (>100-150 mm/month), and radiogenic isotopes reflect an older shallow groundwater efficiently mixing with recent (decadal) recharge. The high total dissolved solids (TDS) of regional shallow groundwater (up to 52.5 g/L) is intrinsically linked with these recharge processes; where infiltrating diffuse rainfall is evaporated, and heavy rainfall events transport saline pore water (saline due to evaporation in the unsaturated zone) to the groundwater system. The high TDS of shallow groundwater beneath the dry Lake Eyre bed (up to 322 g/L) is also controlled by evaporation. However, although evaporite minerals are prolific in the lake area, the non-conservative behaviour of Br in pore water limits analysis of the role of halite mineral dissolution and precipitation reactions controlling groundwater salinity. Evaporation-driven salinisation of shallow groundwater in arid central Australia is distinct from the transpiration-driven salinisation of groundwater in the Australian Murray Basin (located in a semi-arid climate), and results in relatively high groundwater salinity values compared with many other large arid zone endorheic basins across the world.
Plan de classement
Hydrologie [062]
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010054101]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010054101
Contact