Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4437223 | Applied Geochemistry | 2006 | 19 Pages |
Stable isotopes of O (δ18O) in water and N (δ15N) in NO3- have been used as natural indigenous groundwater tracers for sources of water and of NO3- at two riverbank filtration (RBF) water supply systems. Both RBF systems (Skorkov and Sojovice) have wells in unconsolidated Quaternary sediments close to the Jizera River (Czech Republic) that have been affected by increasing NO3- concentrations. The area is underlain by Turonian sandstones and marls that form a deeper bedrock aquifer. Sources of NO3- are local sewerage systems and landfills (point sources) and seasonal application of manure and inorganic fertilizers (diffuse sources).At RBF Skorkov recharge to wells can be modelled using a two-component model with 60% river water contribution and 40% of very shallow groundwater with an average residence time of one month. During periods of abundant precipitation, groundwater originates entirely from the unsaturated zone of the Quaternary aquifer; extensive pumping for over 40 a has created new, bypassing flow paths that preferentially drain the contaminated unsaturated zone. During dry periods, wells are recharged by longer residence time groundwater from the Quaternary aquifer.At RBF Sojovice there is an additional recharge component of groundwater from the Turonian aquifer, which is sandier at this locality; this contains denitrified NO3- with highly positive δ15N values.