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An approach to validate groundwater contamination risk in rural mountainous catchments: the role of lateral groundwater flows

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Detalhes bibliográficos
Resumo:Computer models dedicated to the validation of groundwater contamination risk in the rural environment, namely the risk of contamination by nitrate leachates from agriculture fertilizers, are frequently based on direct comparison of riskyareas (e.g., cropland,pastures usedforlivestockproduction) and spatialdistributionsofcontaminant (nitrate) plumes. These methods are fated to fail where lateral flows dominate in the landscape (mountainous catchments) displacing the nitrate plumes downhill and from the risky spots. In these cases, there is no connection between the spatial location of risky areas and nitrate plumes, unless the two locations can be linked by a contaminant transport model. The main purpose of this paper is therefore to introduce a method whereby spatio-temporal links can be demonstrated between risky areas (contaminant sources), actual nitrate plumes (contaminant sinks) and modeled nitrate distributions at specific groundwater travel times, thereby validating the risk assessment. The method assembles a couple ofwell knownalgorithms,namely theDRASTICmodel [1,2] andthe ProcessingModflowsoftware (https://www.simcore.com), but their combination as risk validation method is original and proved efficient in its initial application, the companion paper of Pacheco et al. [3]
Autores principais:Martins, L. M. O.
Outros Autores:Quininha, M.; Oliveira, Alcino de Sousa; Pacheco, Fernando; Fernandes, Luís Filipe Sanches
Assunto:groundwater contamination risk rural mountainous catchment contaminant transport travel time
Ano:2018
País:Portugal
Tipo de documento:artigo
Tipo de acesso:acesso aberto
Instituição associada:Universidade de Trás-os-Montes e Alto Douro
Idioma:inglês
Origem:Repositório da UTAD
Descrição
Resumo:Computer models dedicated to the validation of groundwater contamination risk in the rural environment, namely the risk of contamination by nitrate leachates from agriculture fertilizers, are frequently based on direct comparison of riskyareas (e.g., cropland,pastures usedforlivestockproduction) and spatialdistributionsofcontaminant (nitrate) plumes. These methods are fated to fail where lateral flows dominate in the landscape (mountainous catchments) displacing the nitrate plumes downhill and from the risky spots. In these cases, there is no connection between the spatial location of risky areas and nitrate plumes, unless the two locations can be linked by a contaminant transport model. The main purpose of this paper is therefore to introduce a method whereby spatio-temporal links can be demonstrated between risky areas (contaminant sources), actual nitrate plumes (contaminant sinks) and modeled nitrate distributions at specific groundwater travel times, thereby validating the risk assessment. The method assembles a couple ofwell knownalgorithms,namely theDRASTICmodel [1,2] andthe ProcessingModflowsoftware (https://www.simcore.com), but their combination as risk validation method is original and proved efficient in its initial application, the companion paper of Pacheco et al. [3]