Ground-penetrating radar insight into a coastal aquifer: the freshwater lens of Borkum Island

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Date
2013
Volume
17
Issue
2
Journal
Series Titel
Book Title
Publisher
Munich : EGU
Abstract

Freshwater lenses, as important resource for drinking water, are sensitive to climate changes and sea level rise. To simulate this impact on the groundwater systems, hydraulic subsurface models have to be designed. Geophysical techniques can provide information for generating realistic models. The aim of our work is to show how ground-penetrating radar (GPR) investigations can contribute to such hydrological simulations. In the pilot area, Borkum island, GPR was used to map the shape of the groundwater table (GWT) and to characterise the aquifer.

In total, 20 km of constant offset (CO) profiles were measured with centre frequencies of 80 and 200 MHz. Wave velocities were determined by common midpoint (CMP) measurements and vertical radar profiling (VRP) in a monitoring well. The 80 MHz CO data show a clear reflection at the groundwater table, whereas the reflection is weaker for the 200 MHz data. After correcting the GPR water tables for the capillary rise, they are in good accordance with the pressure heads of the observation wells in the area. In the centre of the island, the groundwater table is found up to 3.5 m above sea level, however it is lower towards the coastline and marshland. Some local depressions are observed in the region of dune valleys and around pumping stations of the local water supplier. GPR also reveals details within the sediments and highly-permeable aeolian sands can be distinguished from less-permeable marine sediments. Further, a silt loam layer below the water table could be mapped on a large area. The reflection characteristics indicates scattered erosion channels in this layer that cause it to be an aquitard with some leakage.

GPR provides a high resolution map of the groundwater table and insight into the stratigraphy of the sediments and their hydraulic properties. This is valuable complementary information to the observation of sparsely distributed monitoring wells as input to hydraulic simulation.

Description
Keywords
Distributed monitoring, Geophysical techniques, Ground Penetrating Radar, Ground penetrating radars, Hydraulic simulation, Hydrological simulations, Reflection characteristics, Vertical radar profiling, Aquifers, Climate change, Groundwater resources, Radar, Radar measurement, Sea level, Silt, Stratigraphy, Submarine geology, Water, Wells, Ground penetrating radar systems, biostratigraphy, capillarity, carbon monoxide, climate change, coast, coastal aquifer, data set, drinking water, ground penetrating radar, hydraulic property, hydrogeology, marine sediment, monitoring, numerical model, pressure effect, pumping, scattering, sea level change, silty loam, water table, Borkum, East Frisian Islands, Frisian Islands, Germany, Lower Saxony
Citation
Igel, J., Günther, T., & Kuntzer, M. (2013). Ground-penetrating radar insight into a coastal aquifer: the freshwater lens of Borkum Island. 17(2). https://doi.org//10.5194/hess-17-519-2013
License
CC BY 3.0 Unported