• Title/Summary/Keyword: Surface-groundwater interactions

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Analysis on the Spatial-temporal Variation of Surface-groundwater Interaction on the Watershed Basis (유역단위 지표수-지하수 상호작용의 시공간적 변동분석)

  • Kim, Nam-Won;Yoo, Sang-Yeon;Chung, Il-Moon;Lee, Jeong-Woo
    • Journal of Korea Water Resources Association
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    • v.42 no.1
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    • pp.21-31
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    • 2009
  • The characteristics, intensity and direction of groundwater.surface water interactions are controlled by groundwater head gradients, hydraulic conductivity and by the riverbed geometry. As a result of the spatial heterogeneity of these factors and the subsequent variability of the impact of these interaction processes, the water balance is also characterized by highly variable spatial patterns and temporal dynamics. However, spatially detailed studies concerning the spatio-temporal variability of the extent and intensity of surface-groundwater interactions have been limited to the investigation of cross-sections or small stream reaches. Thus, the extensive study on the watershed based interaction between surface water and groundwater is to be analyzed. In this study, the intensity and the spatial extent of interactions along the stream were found by using integrated SWAT-MODFLOW model. This integrated modeling approach was applied to Anyangcheon watershed in Korea. The effluent stream characteristics were found in the watershed, namely, baseflow was annually discharged except heavy rainy periods. The intensity and the spatial extent of surface-groundwater interactions in different sub-watersheds were found on a daily basis. The influential extent of surface-groundwater interaction become larger as the watershed elevations are lower.

Estimating Exploitable Groundwater Amount in Musimcheon Watershed by Using an Integrated Surface Water-Groundwater Model (지표수지하수 통합모형을 이용한 무심천 유역의 지하수 개발가능량 산정)

  • Chung, Il-Moon;Lee, Jeong-Woo;Kim, Nam-Won
    • Economic and Environmental Geology
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    • v.44 no.5
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    • pp.433-442
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    • 2011
  • In Korea, groundwater management has been conducted based on the estimation of annual average of groundwater recharge. Since groundwater recharge and surface water-groundwater interactions show spatiotemporal variation, continuous monitoring and dynamic analysis must be carried out to evaluate the sustainability of groundwater resources. In this study, SWAT-MODFLOW, an integrated surface water-groundwater model was used to analyze surface-groundwater interactions for various groundwater pumping scenarios in Musimcheon watershed. When current usage is applied, the baseflow reduction is about 16%, and annual averaged storage reduction is about 27 mm for whole watershed. As a holistic approach to groundwater sustainability considers the hydrological, ecological, socioeconomic, technological aspects of groundwater utilization, the exploitable groundwater should be determined by physical analysis as well as social compromise in a community.

Development of the spatiotemporal vulnerability assessment method for groundwater resources management at mountainous regions in Korea considering surface water-groundwater interactions (지표수-지하수 연계를 고려한 국내 내륙산간지역 시공간적 지하수자원 관리 취약성 평가 기법 개발)

  • Lee, Jae-Beom;Agossou, Amos;Kim, Geon;Yang, Jeong-Seok
    • Journal of Korea Water Resources Association
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    • v.54 no.10
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    • pp.807-817
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    • 2021
  • In this study, assessment of vulnerability in the management of spatio-temporal groundwater resources considering the surface waterground water interactions was conducted in administrative districts of mountainous regions in Korea. Mountainous regions were classified into four regions and spatial groundwater resources management vulnerability assessment criteria were selected to consider the surface water-ground water interactions. Paju in the central mountainous region, Gapyeongin the mountains region, Gurye in the southwestern mountainous region, and Yangsan in the southeastern mountainous region were selected as a result of the selection of vulnerable area for groundwater resources management. Assessment of the Monthly vulnerability to groundwater resource management due to changes in groundwater levels and infiltration was carried out in the selected areas. As a result of monthly vulnerability to groundwater resources management, December ~ Feburary was assessed as vulnerable to groundwater resource management. The results of this study are expected to contribute to the more efficient groundwater resource management measures by administrative district

Evaluation of Interactions Between Surface Water and Groundwater Based on Temperature, Flow Properties, and Geochemical Data (온도, 유동특성 및 지화학분석 자료를 이용한 지표수-지하수 연계특성 평가)

  • Jeon, Hang-Tak;Kim, Gyoo-Bum
    • The Journal of Engineering Geology
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    • v.21 no.1
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    • pp.45-55
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    • 2011
  • We examined the interactions between surface and groundwater through (1) flowmeter logging, (2) measurements of seasonal and vertical changes in temperature within a well, and (3) geochemical analyses of water samples from nine groundwater-monitoring wells. At two wells adjacent to a stream, subsurface water was found to flow from the stream to a surrounding alluvial fan, and the seasonal change in groundwater temperature is similar to those of surface water and air. Geochemical analyses at two wells indicated hydro-geochemical features affected by streamwater inflow, showing seasonal variations. Accordingly, these two wells are located in an area with active interaction between surface water and groundwater. The Thermochron I-button used in the present study is useful for this type of study of groundwater?surface water interaction because of its low cost and small size.

Conjunctive Management Considering Stream-Aquifer Systems for Drought Season (지표수 지하수 연계운영에 의한 갈수기 지표수-수자원관리)

  • Cha, Kee-Uk;Kim, Woo-Gu;Shin, Young-Rho
    • Proceedings of the Korea Water Resources Association Conference
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    • 2008.05a
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    • pp.389-394
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    • 2008
  • The purpose of this research was to develop a methodology to determine whether conjunctive surface water and groundwater management could significantly reduce deficits in a river basin with a relatively limited alluvial aquifer. The Geum River basin is one of major river basins in South Korea. The upper region of the Geum River basin is typical of many river basins in Korea where the shape of river basin is narrow with small alluvial aquifer depths from 10m to 20m and where most of the groundwater pumped comes quickly from the steamflow. The basin has two surface reservoirs, Daecheong and Yongdam. The most recent reservoir, Yongdam, provides water to a trans-basin diversion, and therefore reduces the water resources available in the Geum River basin. After the completion of Yongdam reservoir, the reduced water supply in the Geum basin resulted in increasing conflicts between downstream water needs and required instream flows, particularly during the low flow season. Historically, the operation of groundwater pumping has had limited control and is administered separately from surface water diversions. Given the limited size of the alluvial aquifer, it is apparent that groundwater pumping is essentially taking its water from the stream. Therefore, the operation of the surface water withdrawals and groundwater pumping must be considered together. The major component of the conjunction water management in this study is a goal-programmin g based optimization model that simultaneously considers surface water withdrawals, groundwater pumping and instream flow requirements. A 10-day time step is used in the model. The interactions between groundwater pumping and the stream are handled through the use of response and lag coefficients. The impacts of pumping on streamflow are considered for multiple time periods. The model is formulated as a linear goal-programming problem that is solved with the commercial LINGO optimization software package.

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Determining Characteristics of Groundwater Inflow to the Stream in an Urban Area using Hydrogeochemical Tracers (222Rn and Major Dissolved Ions) and Microbial Community Analysis (수리지화학적 추적자(222Rn, 주요용존이온)와 미생물 군집 분석을 통한 도심 지역 하천에서의 지하수 유출 특성 평가)

  • Oh, Yong Hwa;Kim, Dong-Hun;Lee, Soo-Hyoung;Moon, Hee Sun;Cho, Soo Young
    • Journal of Soil and Groundwater Environment
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    • v.25 no.2
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    • pp.16-23
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    • 2020
  • In this work, 222Rn activity, major dissolved ions, and microbial community in ground- and surface waters were investigated to characterize groundwater inflow to the stream located in an urban area, Daejeon, Korea. The measured 222Rn activities in groundwater and stream water ranged from 136 to 231 Bq L-1 and 0.3 to 48.8 Bq L-1, respectively. The spatial distributions of 222Rn activity in the stream strongly suggested groundwater inflow to the stream. The change of geochemical composition of the stream water indicated the effect of groundwater discharge became more pronounced as the stream flows downstream. Furthermore, microbial community composition of the stream water had good similarity to that of groundwater, which is another evidence of groundwater discharge. Although groundwater inflow could not be estimated quantitatively in this study, the results can provide useful information to understand interactions between groundwater and surface water, and determine hydrological processes governing groundwater recharge and hydrogeological cycles of dissolved substances such as nutrients and trace metals.

Hydro-ecological characterizations in groundwater dependent ecosystem (지하수 종속 생태환경에서 수문-생태학적 특성 조사 및 분석)

  • Kim, Hee-Jung;Hyun, Yun-Jung;Lee, Kang-Kun
    • Journal of Wetlands Research
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    • v.11 no.3
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    • pp.1-8
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    • 2009
  • The groundwater dependent ecosystem associated with a natural stream is the area where mixing and exchange of surface water and groundwater occurs due to large chemical and hydraulic gradients. Surface-groundwater interactions play an important role in biogeochemical processes in groundwater dependent ecosystems and make this area a hydro-ecological hot spot. The objective of this study is to characterize the groundwater dependent ecosystem in a natural stream where nitrate contamination of stream water is observed by means of hydrogeological, chemical, and biological methods. In this study, vertical flow exchange(hyporheic flow) rates between stream and groundwater were estimated based on vertical hydraulic gradients measured at mini-piezometers of various depths. To investigate the biological natural attenuation potential, biological analyses using polymerase chain reaction(PCR)-cloning methods were performed in this study. Results show that the veritical hyporheic water fluxes affect nitrate concentrations and bacterial densities in groundwater dependent ecosystems to some degree. Also, denitrifying bacteria were identified in hyporheic soils, which may support the biodegradation potential of the groundwater dependent ecosystems under certain conditions.

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Hydrogeological Characterization of Groundwater and Surface Water Interactions in Fresh-Saline Water Mixed Zone of the East Coast Lagoon Area, Korea (동해안 석호 담염수 혼합대에서 지하수와 지표수 상호작용의 수리지질학적 특성 평가)

  • Jeon, Woo-Hyun;Kim, Dong-Hun;Lee, Soo-Hyoung;Hwang, Seho;Moon, Hee Sun;Kim, Yongcheol
    • Journal of Soil and Groundwater Environment
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    • v.26 no.6
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    • pp.144-156
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    • 2021
  • This study examined hydrogeological characteristics of groundwater and surface water interaction in the fresh-saline water mixed zone of East Coast lagoon area, Korea, using several technical approaches including hydrological, lithological, and isotopic methods. In addition, the fresh-saline water interface was evaluated using vertical electrical conductivity (EC) data. For this purpose, three monitoring wells (SJ-P1, SJ-P2, and SJ-P3) were installed across the Songji lagoon at depths of 7.4 to 9.0 m, and water level, EC, and temperature at the wells and in the lagoon (SJ-L1) were monitored using automatic transducers from August 1 to October 21, 2021. Isotopic composition of the groundwater, lagoon water, and sea water were also monitored in the mid-September, 2013. The mixing ratios calculated from oxygen and hydrogen isotopic composition decreased with increasing depth in the monitoring wells, indicating saline water intrusion. In the study area, the interaction of groundwater-surface water-sea water was evident, and residual salinity in the sedimentary layers created in the past marine environment showed disorderly characteristics. Moreover, the horizontal flow at the lagoon's edge was more dominant than the vertical flow.

Application of Quartz Crystal Microbalance to Understanding the Transport of Microplastics in Soil and Groundwater (토양-지하수내 미세플라스틱 거동 연구를 위한 수정진동자미세저울 기술 소개)

  • Kim, Juhyeok;Myeong, Hyeonah;Son, Sangbo;Kwon, Kideok D.
    • Korean Journal of Mineralogy and Petrology
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    • v.33 no.4
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    • pp.463-475
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    • 2020
  • Presence of microplastics in soil and groundwater has recently been reported and environmental concerns are raised as to the plastic pollution. In the subsurface environment, clay minerals and metal oxide minerals are commonly found as finely dispersed states. Because the minerals have high sorption capacities for diverse pollutants, interactions with mineral surface play an important role in the transport of microplastics in groundwater. Accordingly, environmental mineralogy investigating the interactions between microplastics and mineral surfaces is the essential research area to understand the fate and transport of microplastics in the subsurface environment. The microplastic-mineral surface research requires molecular- to nano-scale analyses to be able to probe the relatively weak interactions between them. The current report introduces a nano-scale analysis tool called quartz crystal microbalance (QCM) that can measure the sorbed/desorbed mass of nanoplastics on mineral surfaces at the level of a few nanograms (~10-9 g). This report briefly reviews the main principles in the QCM measurement and discusses applications of QCM to the environmental mineralogy research.

Analysis of correlation between groundwater level decline and wetland area decrease

  • Amos Agossou;Jae-Boem Lee;Bo-Gwon Jung;Jeong-Seok Yang
    • Proceedings of the Korea Water Resources Association Conference
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    • 2023.05a
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    • pp.374-374
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    • 2023
  • Groundwater is the main source of water on which relies many countries in case of emergency, this is the case of Japan in 2011 after the great Sendai Earthquake. This important resource is found to be heavily influenced by human induced factors such as wetland area reduction. For groundwater sustainable management in perfect cohesion with wetland it is important to understand the relationship between both resources. Wetlands have a strong interaction with both groundwater and surface water, influencing catchment hydrology and water quality. Quantifying groundwater-wetland interactions can help better identify locations for wetlands restoration and/or protection. This study uses observation data from piezometers and wetland to study the qualitative and quantitative aspects of the correlation. Groundwater level, wetland area, chemical, organic and inorganic contaminants are the important parameters used. the results proved that few contaminants in the wetland are found in groundwater and in general the wetland quality does not affect that much groundwater quality. The strong linear relationship found between wetland water level and nearest groundwater level proved that, in term of quantity, groundwater and wetland are strongly correlated. While wetland becoming dry, groundwater level has dropped in the region about 0.52m. The area of wetland was found to be lightly correlated with groundwater level, proving that wetlands dry has contributed to groundwater level declining. This study has showed that whilst rainfall variability contributed to the decline and loss of wetlands, the impacts from landuse changes and groundwater extraction were likely to be significant contributors to the observed losses.

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