Karstic behaviour of groundwater in the English Chalk
Karstic behaviour of groundwater in the English Chalk
Although the Chalk is only weakly karstified, tracer testing from stream sinks has demonstrated groundwater flow velocities comparable to those observed in highly karstic aquifers. Field survey of surface karst features in the catchments of the Pang and Lambourn rivers in southern England demonstrates the importance of overlying and adjacent Palaeogene strata in the development of karst features. Tracer techniques employed within the catchments enable further characterisation of the range and connectivity of solutional voids in this area of the Chalk, and allow assessment of the relative importance of different mechanisms of contaminant attenuation. Quantitative tracer test results suggest that groundwater flow may be through a complex combination of small conduits, typically 10–1000 mm in diameter, and more laterally extensive fissures with apertures of 1–50 mm. Evidence of connectivity between conduits and fissures suggest that in areas of the Chalk with rapid groundwater flow, fissures supplying abstraction boreholes may be connected to karst conduit networks with low potential for contaminant attenuation.
chalk, karst, groundwater, tracer testing
63-70
Maurice, L.D.
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Atkinson, T.C.
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Barker, John A.
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Bloomfield, J.P.
a7ac6fc6-3af3-4ea9-88df-a3b45975d34b
Farrant, A.R.
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Williams, A.T.
6b933540-580a-41df-8966-c9c5e57af68a
30 October 2006
Maurice, L.D.
3e4e3377-8d3f-4899-b390-8b0fb6bfe414
Atkinson, T.C.
a4f27bb3-44d3-4de6-9245-e01252796c3b
Barker, John A.
33bf9dec-cc9b-451c-8192-46099e316b6d
Bloomfield, J.P.
a7ac6fc6-3af3-4ea9-88df-a3b45975d34b
Farrant, A.R.
6394d449-c077-4df9-b2c1-c66347ca43b8
Williams, A.T.
6b933540-580a-41df-8966-c9c5e57af68a
Maurice, L.D., Atkinson, T.C., Barker, John A., Bloomfield, J.P., Farrant, A.R. and Williams, A.T.
(2006)
Karstic behaviour of groundwater in the English Chalk.
Journal of Hydrology, 330 (1-2), .
(doi:10.1016/j.jhydrol.2006.04.012).
Abstract
Although the Chalk is only weakly karstified, tracer testing from stream sinks has demonstrated groundwater flow velocities comparable to those observed in highly karstic aquifers. Field survey of surface karst features in the catchments of the Pang and Lambourn rivers in southern England demonstrates the importance of overlying and adjacent Palaeogene strata in the development of karst features. Tracer techniques employed within the catchments enable further characterisation of the range and connectivity of solutional voids in this area of the Chalk, and allow assessment of the relative importance of different mechanisms of contaminant attenuation. Quantitative tracer test results suggest that groundwater flow may be through a complex combination of small conduits, typically 10–1000 mm in diameter, and more laterally extensive fissures with apertures of 1–50 mm. Evidence of connectivity between conduits and fissures suggest that in areas of the Chalk with rapid groundwater flow, fissures supplying abstraction boreholes may be connected to karst conduit networks with low potential for contaminant attenuation.
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Published date: 30 October 2006
Keywords:
chalk, karst, groundwater, tracer testing
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Local EPrints ID: 74321
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/74321
ISSN: 0022-1694
PURE UUID: e30fac1c-62bb-405e-92d9-e3580e75a7cd
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Date deposited: 11 Mar 2010
Last modified: 13 Mar 2024 22:30
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Contributors
Author:
L.D. Maurice
Author:
T.C. Atkinson
Author:
J.P. Bloomfield
Author:
A.R. Farrant
Author:
A.T. Williams
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