Groundwater dynamics and surface water-groundwater interaction in a prograding delta island, Louisiana, USA

Delta islands make up the majority of coastal delta area. However, the groundwater hydrology of young, prograding delta systems and its relationship to surrounding surface water dynamics are poorly understood. Deltas in coastal environments are assumed to function as chemical “buffers”, filtering...

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Main Author: O'Connor, Michael Thomas
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/26935
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-269352015-09-20T17:28:06ZGroundwater dynamics and surface water-groundwater interaction in a prograding delta island, Louisiana, USAO'Connor, Michael ThomasDeltaGroundwaterWetlandForcingsDelta islands make up the majority of coastal delta area. However, the groundwater hydrology of young, prograding delta systems and its relationship to surrounding surface water dynamics are poorly understood. Deltas in coastal environments are assumed to function as chemical “buffers”, filtering nutrient-rich terrestrial runoff through the island structures and surface water ecosystems as it travels to the sea, but the magnitude of this effect cannot be accurately quantified without understanding the physical relationships between the surface water and groundwater. This study developed the first conceptual model of the hydrology of prograding delta island groundwater systems. The study was based on field data collected at Pintail Island, a 2 km2 island within the Wax Lake Delta in Louisiana. Hydraulic properties and processes were quantified at multiple depths at locations spanning the island elevation gradient. Groundwater and surface water levels were monitored. A weather station recorded precipitation, air, and wind conditions. The groundwater within Pintail Island was both spatially and temporally dynamic throughout the study period of Sept/9/2013 to Feb/4/2014. The aquifer within the distal limbs of the island responded as a connected, saturated unconfined aquifer. The portions of Pintail Island within the older, proximal, higher elevation apex were found to be a two-layer system with fine sediments and organic matter overlying sandy deposits. The aquifer within this section of the island responded differently during times of elevated surface water (storm events) and times of normal surface water (calm periods) and differently from the distal-island unconfined system. The fine, shallow (roughly 0-60cm depth) sediments capping this older, higher portion of the island appeared to inhibit vertical flow between the surface and subsurface, creating semi-confined conditions within the sands in the deeper island subsurface. High water levels led to overpressurization of the apical aquifer, which was maintained between storms due to the low hydraulic gradient and the low permeability of the porous medium. During inundating storm events, groundwater potentials mimicked surrounding surface water levels. This conceptual model of a prograding coastal delta island now provides a foundation for further, hydrologically-realistic study of delta ecology and nutrient exchange.text2014-10-28T17:05:54Z2014-052014-06-04May 20142014-10-28T17:05:54ZThesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/26935en
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Delta
Groundwater
Wetland
Forcings
spellingShingle Delta
Groundwater
Wetland
Forcings
O'Connor, Michael Thomas
Groundwater dynamics and surface water-groundwater interaction in a prograding delta island, Louisiana, USA
description Delta islands make up the majority of coastal delta area. However, the groundwater hydrology of young, prograding delta systems and its relationship to surrounding surface water dynamics are poorly understood. Deltas in coastal environments are assumed to function as chemical “buffers”, filtering nutrient-rich terrestrial runoff through the island structures and surface water ecosystems as it travels to the sea, but the magnitude of this effect cannot be accurately quantified without understanding the physical relationships between the surface water and groundwater. This study developed the first conceptual model of the hydrology of prograding delta island groundwater systems. The study was based on field data collected at Pintail Island, a 2 km2 island within the Wax Lake Delta in Louisiana. Hydraulic properties and processes were quantified at multiple depths at locations spanning the island elevation gradient. Groundwater and surface water levels were monitored. A weather station recorded precipitation, air, and wind conditions. The groundwater within Pintail Island was both spatially and temporally dynamic throughout the study period of Sept/9/2013 to Feb/4/2014. The aquifer within the distal limbs of the island responded as a connected, saturated unconfined aquifer. The portions of Pintail Island within the older, proximal, higher elevation apex were found to be a two-layer system with fine sediments and organic matter overlying sandy deposits. The aquifer within this section of the island responded differently during times of elevated surface water (storm events) and times of normal surface water (calm periods) and differently from the distal-island unconfined system. The fine, shallow (roughly 0-60cm depth) sediments capping this older, higher portion of the island appeared to inhibit vertical flow between the surface and subsurface, creating semi-confined conditions within the sands in the deeper island subsurface. High water levels led to overpressurization of the apical aquifer, which was maintained between storms due to the low hydraulic gradient and the low permeability of the porous medium. During inundating storm events, groundwater potentials mimicked surrounding surface water levels. This conceptual model of a prograding coastal delta island now provides a foundation for further, hydrologically-realistic study of delta ecology and nutrient exchange. === text
author O'Connor, Michael Thomas
author_facet O'Connor, Michael Thomas
author_sort O'Connor, Michael Thomas
title Groundwater dynamics and surface water-groundwater interaction in a prograding delta island, Louisiana, USA
title_short Groundwater dynamics and surface water-groundwater interaction in a prograding delta island, Louisiana, USA
title_full Groundwater dynamics and surface water-groundwater interaction in a prograding delta island, Louisiana, USA
title_fullStr Groundwater dynamics and surface water-groundwater interaction in a prograding delta island, Louisiana, USA
title_full_unstemmed Groundwater dynamics and surface water-groundwater interaction in a prograding delta island, Louisiana, USA
title_sort groundwater dynamics and surface water-groundwater interaction in a prograding delta island, louisiana, usa
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/26935
work_keys_str_mv AT oconnormichaelthomas groundwaterdynamicsandsurfacewatergroundwaterinteractioninaprogradingdeltaislandlouisianausa
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