Vertical groundwater storage properties and changes in confinement determined using hydraulic head response to atmospheric tides
Water Resources Research, 2017•Wiley Online Library
Accurate determination of groundwater state of confinement and compressible storage
properties at vertical resolution over depth is notoriously difficult. We use the hydraulic head
response to atmospheric tides at 2 cpd frequency as a tracer to quantify barometric efficiency
(BE) and specific storage (Ss) over depth. Records of synthesized Earth tides, atmospheric
pressure, and hydraulic heads measured in nine piezometers completed at depths between
5 and 55 m into unconsolidated smectitic clay and silt, sand and gravel were examined in …
properties at vertical resolution over depth is notoriously difficult. We use the hydraulic head
response to atmospheric tides at 2 cpd frequency as a tracer to quantify barometric efficiency
(BE) and specific storage (Ss) over depth. Records of synthesized Earth tides, atmospheric
pressure, and hydraulic heads measured in nine piezometers completed at depths between
5 and 55 m into unconsolidated smectitic clay and silt, sand and gravel were examined in …
Abstract
Accurate determination of groundwater state of confinement and compressible storage properties at vertical resolution over depth is notoriously difficult. We use the hydraulic head response to atmospheric tides at 2 cpd frequency as a tracer to quantify barometric efficiency (BE) and specific storage (Ss) over depth. Records of synthesized Earth tides, atmospheric pressure, and hydraulic heads measured in nine piezometers completed at depths between 5 and 55 m into unconsolidated smectitic clay and silt, sand and gravel were examined in the frequency domain. The barometric efficiency increased over depth from ∼0.05 in silty clay to ∼0.15 in sands and gravels. BE for silty clay was confirmed by calculating the loading efficiency as 0.95 using rainfall at the surface. Specific storage was calculated using effective rather than total moisture. The differences in phase between atmospheric pressure and hydraulic heads at 2 cpd were ∼180° below 10 m indicating confined conditions despite the low BE. Heads in the sediment above a fine sand and silt layer at 12 m exhibited a time variable phase difference between 0° and 180° indicating varying confinement. Our results illustrate that the atmospheric tide at 2 cpd is a powerful natural tracer for quantifying groundwater state of confinement and compressible storage properties in layered formations from hydraulic heads and atmospheric pressure records without the need for externally induced hydraulic stress. This approach could significantly improve the development of conceptual hydrogeological model used for groundwater resource development and management.
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