Using water level and temperature time series to improve hydrogeological parameterization in a complex alluvial system

A new pumping station was designed in the northern high plain of the province of Padua (Veneto region, north-eastern Italy), aiming to reach an overall abstraction rate of about 2 m3/s, in order to relevantly contribute to the regional drinking water supply. Local unconfined aquifer is a highly per...

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Main Authors: Luca Vettorello, Andrea Sottani
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PAGEPress Publications 2019-12-01
Series:Acque Sotterranee
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.acquesotterranee.net/index.php/acque/article/view/413
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spelling doaj-ca571f09ad83409a857e13d984468ef72020-11-25T02:37:28ZengPAGEPress PublicationsAcque Sotterranee1828-454X2280-64582019-12-018410.7343/as-2019-413Using water level and temperature time series to improve hydrogeological parameterization in a complex alluvial systemLuca Vettorello0Andrea Sottani1Sinergeo Srl, VicenzaSinergeo Srl, Vicenza A new pumping station was designed in the northern high plain of the province of Padua (Veneto region, north-eastern Italy), aiming to reach an overall abstraction rate of about 2 m3/s, in order to relevantly contribute to the regional drinking water supply. Local unconfined aquifer is a highly permeable alluvial system, hydraulically connected to the Brenta river, one of the most important groundwater recharging sources of the entire hydrogeological basin, and the Camazzole lake, a former open-pit mine. This lake deepens below the water table and is directly connected to the surrounding phreatic aquifer and indirectly to the river, forming a 3-element hydraulic equilibrium. In order to evaluate the sustainability of the groundwater exploitation, this case study required an in-depth analysis of the hydrogeological resource, focusing on the estimation of hydraulic conductivity values and distribution. A numerical simulation was needed since the first step of the study, to plan the following field activities and provide a rough representation of the expectable drawdown in the pumped aquifer, even if the initial model had a very high level of uncertainty. Before the pumping tests no experimental data were available, so a homogeneous distribution of hydraulic conductivity was preliminarily assigned to the entire mesh, referring to a single bibliographic value available for the aquifer. After the analytical interpretation of pumping tests, different punctual values of hydraulic conductivity were estimated, but the parameter field was still very difficult to define, due to the complexity of the hydrogeological context and the non-uniqueness of the possible spatial interpolations. The availability of groundwater level observations at a larger scale allowed to calculate a set of hydraulic conductivity fields through the pilot points method, integrating the pumping tests results and extending aquifer characterization to a wider domain. The numerical model was finally calibrated with groundwater temperature monitored trends, reproducing the interaction between the lake and the phreatic aquifer through a heat transport simulation. The resulting hydraulic conductivity distribution has been considerably refined, especially at the interface between the lake and the aquifer, and the parameterization has been further validated using heat as a groundwater tracer. https://www.acquesotterranee.net/index.php/acque/article/view/413hydraulic properties, heat transport modeling, groundwater/ surface-water relations
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Luca Vettorello
Andrea Sottani
spellingShingle Luca Vettorello
Andrea Sottani
Using water level and temperature time series to improve hydrogeological parameterization in a complex alluvial system
Acque Sotterranee
hydraulic properties, heat transport modeling, groundwater/ surface-water relations
author_facet Luca Vettorello
Andrea Sottani
author_sort Luca Vettorello
title Using water level and temperature time series to improve hydrogeological parameterization in a complex alluvial system
title_short Using water level and temperature time series to improve hydrogeological parameterization in a complex alluvial system
title_full Using water level and temperature time series to improve hydrogeological parameterization in a complex alluvial system
title_fullStr Using water level and temperature time series to improve hydrogeological parameterization in a complex alluvial system
title_full_unstemmed Using water level and temperature time series to improve hydrogeological parameterization in a complex alluvial system
title_sort using water level and temperature time series to improve hydrogeological parameterization in a complex alluvial system
publisher PAGEPress Publications
series Acque Sotterranee
issn 1828-454X
2280-6458
publishDate 2019-12-01
description A new pumping station was designed in the northern high plain of the province of Padua (Veneto region, north-eastern Italy), aiming to reach an overall abstraction rate of about 2 m3/s, in order to relevantly contribute to the regional drinking water supply. Local unconfined aquifer is a highly permeable alluvial system, hydraulically connected to the Brenta river, one of the most important groundwater recharging sources of the entire hydrogeological basin, and the Camazzole lake, a former open-pit mine. This lake deepens below the water table and is directly connected to the surrounding phreatic aquifer and indirectly to the river, forming a 3-element hydraulic equilibrium. In order to evaluate the sustainability of the groundwater exploitation, this case study required an in-depth analysis of the hydrogeological resource, focusing on the estimation of hydraulic conductivity values and distribution. A numerical simulation was needed since the first step of the study, to plan the following field activities and provide a rough representation of the expectable drawdown in the pumped aquifer, even if the initial model had a very high level of uncertainty. Before the pumping tests no experimental data were available, so a homogeneous distribution of hydraulic conductivity was preliminarily assigned to the entire mesh, referring to a single bibliographic value available for the aquifer. After the analytical interpretation of pumping tests, different punctual values of hydraulic conductivity were estimated, but the parameter field was still very difficult to define, due to the complexity of the hydrogeological context and the non-uniqueness of the possible spatial interpolations. The availability of groundwater level observations at a larger scale allowed to calculate a set of hydraulic conductivity fields through the pilot points method, integrating the pumping tests results and extending aquifer characterization to a wider domain. The numerical model was finally calibrated with groundwater temperature monitored trends, reproducing the interaction between the lake and the phreatic aquifer through a heat transport simulation. The resulting hydraulic conductivity distribution has been considerably refined, especially at the interface between the lake and the aquifer, and the parameterization has been further validated using heat as a groundwater tracer.
topic hydraulic properties, heat transport modeling, groundwater/ surface-water relations
url https://www.acquesotterranee.net/index.php/acque/article/view/413
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