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  • Cherry, John A  (2)
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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Canadian Science Publishing ; 1998
    In:  Canadian Geotechnical Journal Vol. 35, No. 6 ( 1998-12-01), p. 986-1003
    In: Canadian Geotechnical Journal, Canadian Science Publishing, Vol. 35, No. 6 ( 1998-12-01), p. 986-1003
    Abstract: Much of the southwestern part of Ontario between Lake Huron and Lake Erie has a thin freshwater aquifer overlain by an aquitard of Late Pleistocene clayey glaciolacustrine deposits and underlain by a thick Devonian shale aquitard. In a large area east of the St. Clair River, where the Quaternary aquitard is 30-50 m thick, groundwater of Pleistocene origin (identified by 18 O and 2 H signature) occurs in the aquifer and in the bottom part of the Quaternary aquitard. Numerous piezometer nests in the aquitard show a downward hydraulic gradient with depth. In some areas, the aquitard has downward gradients only in the upper part and upward gradient in the lower part, indicating a transient condition. The piezometer nests in the clayey aquitard also show an increase in Cl - concentration with depth. Long-term piezometer monitoring at two sites show a major shift in the aquitard hydraulic gradient since 1983 and a large rise in head in the underlying aquifer. Analyses of initial aquifer water levels, reported in well drilling records, indicate a large decline in the potentiometric surface of the aquifer between the 1940's and the 1970's followed by a recent rise in the surface in part of the region. This pattern is consistent with well drilling and water use records indicating that 7000 wells were installed in the aquifer in the three decades since 1940 and that groundwater use has greatly diminished in the past 10-15 years due to rural pipeline distribution of lake and river water. The hydraulic gradient in the aquitard is slowly adjusting to the rise in the aquifer potentiometric surface. One-dimensional solute transport modelling provides close matches to the vertical profiles of Cl - migrating upward from the aquifer since deglaciation, 15 000 - 18 000 years before present, by diffusion with little or no advection. The lack of advection indicates a near-neutral long-term hydraulic gradient. As the withdrawal rate of water from the aquifer continues to decline, it is expected that the hydraulic head in the aquitard in much of the area westward of the recharge area will continue to adjust for many decades.Key words: clay, aquitard, aquifer, water use, hydraulic gradient.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0008-3674 , 1208-6010
    Language: English
    Publisher: Canadian Science Publishing
    Publication Date: 1998
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 1482247-7
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Canadian Science Publishing ; 2004
    In:  Canadian Geotechnical Journal Vol. 41, No. 5 ( 2004-09-01), p. 943-958
    In: Canadian Geotechnical Journal, Canadian Science Publishing, Vol. 41, No. 5 ( 2004-09-01), p. 943-958
    Abstract: An extensive groundwater zone of exceptionally negative δ 18 O (17.5 to 16.0) exists in a thin, regional, freshwater aquifer between Lake St. Clair and the southern shore of Lake Huron in southwestern Ontario. The zone occurs at the interface between the overlying thick Quaternary clay aquitard of glaciolacustrine origin and the underlying bedrock shale. This isotope signature, which is 7 more negative (lighter) than modern water, indicates a Late Pleistocene origin of the aquifer water. This zone occurs only where the Quaternary aquitard is greater than 35 m thick. In the Quaternary aquitard, the Pleistocene isotope signature extends upward from the aquifer and then has a gradational transition to signature resembling modern water (10) near the ground surface. This regional-scale study of the aquiferaquitard system indicates that the pattern of flow of the aquifer has allowed the persistence of the Pleistocene groundwater since the aquitard was deposited approximately 10 000 years before present. As part of the regional study, a two-dimensional groundwater flow model was used to assess the origin and persistence of the Pleistocene zone under natural conditions. The persistence of the Pleistocene zone was also assessed based on water budgets prepared from aquifer use history and aquiferaquitard parameters. Our study finds that the low yield and poor quality of groundwater in this zone have caused minimal use, resulting in the persistence of the Pleistocene groundwater since the beginning of major aquifer use in the 1940s.Key words: regional aquifer, aquitard, Pleistocene water, stagnation, aquifer use.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0008-3674 , 1208-6010
    Language: English
    Publisher: Canadian Science Publishing
    Publication Date: 2004
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 1482247-7
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
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