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EN
An important task of the Polish Geological Institute - National Research Institute (PGI-NRI) acting as the Polish Hydrogeological Survey (PHS) is to collect hydrogeological data and information for the entire country. Hydrogeological databases contain information on hydrogeological conditions, groundwater resources, and groundwater monitoring results in terms of chemical and quantitative status, which together form the PHS data processing system. Input data of databases are: results of cartographic works, information from hydrogeological documentations, data produced by other institutions and users, as well as results of research conducted in the groundwater monitoring network. The article presents the characteristics of hydrogeological databases that constitute the basis for the implementation of the main tasks of the PHS, which is the recognition, balancing and protection of groundwater in the country. The information contained in the hydrogeological databases kept by PGI-NRI is made available on request, in accordance with regulations. The main recipients of this data are government and local administration, companies commissioned by government or local administration, as well as universities and research institutes.
EN
The Polish Geological Institute has been carrying out the tasks of the geological survey since its establishment in 1919. Hydrogeology was present from the very beginning and the groundwater monitoring became the systematic activity in the 2nd fifty years of the Institute’s life. Groundwater quantity monitoring expressed as measurements of groundwater table fluctuations was put into practice in 1972, while the groundwater quality monitoring that includes determination of chemical composition of water started in 1991. Both types of monitoring cover the entire area of Poland. Systematic hydrogeological observations and tests are one of the most important tasks carried out by hydrogeologists of the Polish Geological Institute. Results of these observations are used for many studies, analyses and forecasts carried out as part of the tasks of the hydrogeological survey, often in cooperation with universities and geological enterprises, for the needs of governmental and local administration and for reporting to the EU structures.
PL
W celu oceny wpływu działalności człowieka na wody podziemne, analizie poddano skład chemiczny wód podziemnych występujących na obszarach o różnorodnych sposobach użytkowania terenu. Do badań wykorzystano wyniki analiz fizyczno-chemicznych wód podziemnych wykonywanych w ramach monitoringu krajowego w latach 1995–2017, w podziale na różne stopnie izolacji opróbowanych poziomów wodonośnych. Najbardziej są zanieczyszczone wody pochodzące z otworów monitoringowych zlokalizowanych na obszarach przemysłowych w poziomach o swobodnym zwierciadle wody. W wodach pobranych z punktów monitoringowych zlokalizowanych na obszarach wiejskich oraz na obszarach występowania gruntów ornych stwierdzono wysokie zawartości azotanów i siarczanów, a na obszarach miejskich podwyższone są także stężenia fosforanów i cynku. Najmniej zanieczyszczone są wody z punktów monitoringowych umiejscowionych na terenach zieleni miejskiej. Chemizm wód podziemnych w analizowanych punktach monitoringowych zależy zarówno od czynników naturalnych, jak i charakteru użytkowania terenu. Podwyższone stężenia NO3 –, HPO4 – lub SO4 2– są ewidentnie wynikiem działalności człowieka, podczas gdy podwyższone stężenia Na, Cl i NH4 + mogą być zarówno pochodzenia antropogenicznego, jak i skutkiem naturalnych procesów hydrogeochemicznych. Stężenia Ca i Mg w badanych wodach podziemnych są głównie efektem procesów naturalnych.
EN
The chemical quality of groundwater beneath the different types of land use areas was examined to evaluate the effects of human activities on groundwater. The study of the results of groundwater quality tests conducted as part of the Polish National Monitoring in 1995–2017 was performed in order to evaluate the effects of human activities on groundwater in the aquifers of different levels of isolation. The most polluted waters are those collected at monitoring points located within unconfined aquifers of industrial areas. The waters taken from monitoring points located in rural areas and arable lands show a high level of nitrates and sulphates. In urban areas, also phosphate and zinc concentrations are elevated. The least polluted waters were collected from points located in urban green areas. The groundwater chemistry in analyzed monitoring points depends on both natural factors and the nature of land use. Elevated concentrations of NO3 –, HPO4 – or SO4 2– are evidently the result of human activity, while the increased levels of Na, Cl and NH4 + come from both anthropogenic sources and natural processes. Ca and Mg concentrations in the studied waters are mainly the result of natural processes.
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