Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8913687 | Journal of African Earth Sciences | 2018 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
A groundwater investigation was performed to characterize hydrogeological conditions and well performance in a shallow alluvial aquifer using well logs, step-drawdown tests, and hydrogeochemical data. Results from three single-well step-drawdown tests conducted in three recently drilled boreholes located west of the Qena area in Upper Egypt and were analyzed by the Rorabaugh (1953) graphical method. A total of 47 groundwater wells were sampled and analyzed to detect the main hydrochemical facies associated geochemical processes. Results of the step-drawdown tests indicated well losses between 1.5% and 27.7% (14.2% avg.) and aquifer losses of between 72.3% and 98.5% (85.8% avg.), reflective of high well efficiencies. Specific capacity values varied from 183.4Â m3/day/m to 278.4Â m3/day/m while well efficiency values varied from 72.3% to 98.5%, indicating that the wells had been properly designed and developed. Estimated aquifer transmissivity ranges from 1103.7Â m2/day to 1459.7Â m2/day (1314.9Â m2/day avg.), indicating high yields and water accessibility to the wells. Results indicated laminar flow at the aquifer/well-face contact with negligible turbulent flow. Gibbs and various scatter ionic ratios plots of the geochemical data indicate that water-rock interaction followed by evaporation are the most dominant processes controlling groundwater composition, while a Piper plot reflects mixing with irrigation-return flows subject to evapotranspiration. The approach demonstrates the practical applications of the single-well step-drawdown tests for estimating of the safe and sustained well yields for future groundwater extraction.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geology
Authors
Fathy Abdalla, Karem Moubark,