Authors / CoAuthors
Lawrie, K. | Brodie, R.S. | Magee, J.
Abstract
The discovery of significant volumes of good-quality groundwater resources in the BHMAR project study area, near Menindee, NSW, highlights the likelihood of similar opportunities further upstream in the Darling-Barwon system, and in other data-poor river systems within the Murray-Darling Basin (MDB) and elsewhere. The project identified the importance in the Darling floodplain of river leakage for recharge, especially during high-flow events. Similarities in geomorphology, stratigraphy and tectonics between the study area and the Upper Darling indicate that groundwater resources could occur where recharge pathways through the upper confining aquitard connect scroll-plain tracts to suitable (Calivil Formation equivalent) aquifer cells. Based on project findings, groundwater investigations in the Darling upstream of Menindee along coincident, separate and particularly intersecting scroll-plain tracts should acquire fundamental data to characterise confining aquitards, semi-confined and surficial unconfined aquifers and zones of preferential river leakage. In the Upper Darling, hydrogeological similarities with the BHMAR study area are likely to also provide opportunities for managed aquifer recharge (MAR). The new understanding of recharge mechanisms during flood events has broader implications for the modelling and assessment of surface-groundwater interaction in many Basin rivers. This includes the need to vary stream bed conductance under different stream flow regimes. It is also recommended that estimates of groundwater extraction limits for relevant aquifers should focus on recharge from flood-based episodic river leakage. In the BHMAR study, the integrated use of airborne electromagnetics (AEM), ground electrical methods, sonic drilling and borehole nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), enabled the rapid characterisation of complex hydrogeological systems, including key groundwater parameters necessary for assessing groundwater resources and MAR options. This methodology has the potential for application in many Australian landscapes (and more broadly). The new geological, geophysical, geochemical and hydrogeological datasets and understanding acquired in this project also have broader implications for fundamental geological studies and mineral exploration.
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nonGeographicDataset
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75728
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Cnr Jerrabomberra Ave and Hindmarsh Dr GPO Box 378
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- External PublicationAbstract
- Australian and New Zealand Standard Research Classification (ANZSRC)
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- Geology
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2013-01-01T00:00:00
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Abstract prepared for submission to the International Association of Hydrogeologists (IAH).
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