PL EN


Preferencje help
Widoczny [Schowaj] Abstrakt
Liczba wyników
Tytuł artykułu

Surface water–groundwater interaction in the fractured sandstone aquifer impacted by mining-induced subsidence: 2. Hydrogeochemistry

Autorzy
Treść / Zawartość
Identyfikatory
Warianty tytułu
Konferencja
Groundwater quality sustainability : XXXVIII IAH Congress in Kraków
Języki publikacji
EN
Abstrakty
EN
Water quality along the Waratah Rivulet in the Woronora Lake Catchment, New South Wales (NSW), Australia, has been monitored during the last three years by the Sydney Catchment Authority. Water quality data shows changes in chemical composition due to cracking of streambeds and rockbars, and diversion of surface water into subsurface routes in the Hawkesbury Sandstone aquifer. Water quality upstream of the longwall panels is comparable to nearly pristine water in creeks and rivers flowing in similar sandstone bedrock environments and to limited water quality data collected prior to mining. A segment of the Waratah Rivulet, where subsidence and cracking of streambeds and rockbars has occurred, is causing surface water to be redirected into subsurface fracture systems, mix with groundwater already present in the aquifer and partially reappear downstream. This subsurface flow in the shallow fractured sandstone aquifer causes the chemical composition and water quality to change as an effect of water–rock interactions. Salinity, iron, manganese and many cation and anion concentrations increase, whereas oxygen is significantly depleted. Mobilisation of barium and strontium from the rock mass indicates fast chemical dissolution reactions between the subsurface flow and carbonate minerals. Other metals mobilised include zinc, cobalt and nickel. Subsurface water partially discharges from underground receptors downstream of the area impacted by longwall mining. The discharged water is rapidly oxidised by atmospheric oxygen, causing precipitation of iron and manganese oxides / hydroxides out of solution. Hydrogeochemical modelling indicates the dominant iron minerals precipitated out from the water are in this environment goethite, lepidocrocite and ferrihydrite. The paper discusses changes in surface water and groundwater chemistry due to subsurface flow and water–rock interaction, the hydrogeochemical processes responsible for changes in water chemistry, as well as changes in water quality along the rivulet.
Rocznik
Strony
43--54
Opis fizyczny
Bibliogr. 10 poz., rys., wykr.
Twórcy
autor
  • Sydney Catchment Authority, Penrith NSW 2751, Australia
Bibliografia
  • 1. BOOTH C.J., 2002 — The effects of longwall coal mining on overlying aquifers. In: Mine water hydrogeology and geochemistry (eds. P.L. Younger, N.S. Robins). Geol.l Soc. London, Sp. Publ., 198: 17–45.
  • 2. BOOTH C.J., BERTSCH L.P., 1999 — Groundwater geochemistry in shallow aquifers above longwall mines in Illinois, USA. Hydrogeol. J., 7: 561–575.
  • 3. BOOTH C.J., SPANDE E.D., PATTEE C.T., MILLER J.D., BERTSCH L.P., 1998 — Positive and negative impacts of longwall mine subsidence on a sandstone aquifer. Environ. Geol., 34: 223–233.
  • 4. BULLOCK S.E.T., BELL F.G., 1997 — Some problems associated with past mining at a mine in the Witbank coalfield, South Africa. Environ. Geol., 33: 61–71.
  • 5. JANKOWSKI J., 2007 — Changes of water quality in a stream impacted by longwall mining subsidence. In: Proc. 7th Triennial Conference on Mine Subsidence (eds. G. Li, D. Kay): 241–251. Mine Subsidence Technological Society, Wollongong.
  • 6. JANKOWSKI J., MADDEN A., McLEAN W., 2008 — Surface water–groundwater connectivity in a longwall mining impacted catchment in the Southern Coalfield, NSW, Australia. In: Proc. Water Down Under 2008 (eds. M. Lamber et al.): 2128–2139. Adelaide, Australia.
  • 7. JANKOWSKI J., SPIES B., 2007 — Impact of longwall mining on surface water–groundwater interaction and changes in chemical composition of creek water. In: Proc. XXXV IAH Congress (eds. L. Ribeiro et al.). Lisbon, Portugal, CD-ROM.
  • 8. KROGH M., 2007 — Management of longwall coal mining impacts in Sydney’s southern drinking water catchments. Australasian J. Environ. Managem., 14: 155–165.
  • 9. PARKHURST D.L., APPELO C.A.J., 1999 — User’s guide to PHREEQC (Version 2) – A computer program for speciation, batch-reaction, one-dimensional transport, and inverse geochemical calculations: U.S. Geological Survey Water-Resources Investigations Report 99–4259. (Program version 2.11, released February 2005).
  • 10. TEC, 2007 — Impacts of longwall coal mining on the environment in New South Wales. Total Environment Centre.
Typ dokumentu
Bibliografia
Identyfikator YADDA
bwmeta1.element.baztech-06fa5054-2196-4920-9a6b-e53aa023fcf1
JavaScript jest wyłączony w Twojej przeglądarce internetowej. Włącz go, a następnie odśwież stronę, aby móc w pełni z niej korzystać.