Water Stewardship Information Sources

ID 1950
Citation Welch, LA and Allen, DM. 2014. Hydraulic conductivity characteristics in mountains and implications for conceptualizing bedrock groundwater flow. Hydrgeology Journal 22(5) 1003-1026.
Organization SFU
URL http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10040-014-1121-5?wt_mc=alerts.TOCjournals
Abstract/Description or Keywords Influences of hydraulic conductivity (K) heterogeneities on bedrock groundwater (BG) flow systems in mountainous topography are investigated using a conceptual 2D numerical modelling approach. A conceptual model for K heterogeneity in crystalline bedrock mountainous environments is developed based on a review of previous research, and represents heterogeneities due to weathering profile, bedrock fracture characteristics, and catchment-scale (?0.1-1 km) structural features. Numerical groundwater modelling of K scenarios for hypothetical mountain catchment topography indicates that general characteristics of the BG flow directions are dominated by prominent topographic features. Within the modelled saturated BG flow system, ?90 % or more of total BG flux is focussed within a fractured bedrock zone, extending to depths of ?100-200 m below the ground surface, overlying lower-K bedrock. Structural features and heterogeneities, represented as discrete zones of higher or lower K relative to surrounding bedrock, locally influence BG flow, but do not influence general BG flow patterns or general positions of BG flow divides. This result is supported by similar BG transit-time distribution shapes and statistics for systems with and without structural features. The results support the development of topography-based methods for predicting general locations of BG flow-system boundaries in mountain regions.
Information Type article
Regional Watershed Okanagan
Sub-watershed if known
Aquifer #
Comments
Project status complete
Contact Name Laurie Welch
Contact Email [email protected]