Water Stewardship Information Sources

ID 64
Citation Athanasopoulos, P. 2009. Using stable isotopes to develop a regional hydrogeological model and characterize nitrate sources in groundwater. MSc Thesis. University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon.
Organization University of Saskatchewan
URL http://ecommons.usask.ca/bitstream/handle/10388/etd-08272009-114503/PanaMScThesis2009.pdf
Abstract/Description or Keywords Semi-arid regions, like the Okanagan Basin of British Columbia, Canada, are often faced
with the difficulty of managing limited groundwater and surface water resources while
accommodating rapid population growth and increasing land development. In the South
Okanagan Basin, a better understanding of groundwater recharge sources, groundwater
availability and susceptibility of water supplies to anthropogenic contamination is needed to best
direct and protect the region's water resources. The purpose of this study was: (1) to characterize
the regional hydrogeological setting of the South Okanagan Basin by establishing an isotopic and
geochemical framework that included precipitation and surface waters of the Okanagan Basin
and groundwaters of the South Okanagan Basin; and (2) to characterize nitrate contamination
and its sources in shallow groundwaters of the Osoyoos area. Stable isotopes of water, nitrate
and dissolved oxygen, groundwater chemistry, water levels and enriched tritium, tritium/helium
and/or radiocarbon age dating techniques were used. Two provisional local meteoric water lines
were established for the Okanagan Basin: ?2
H=6.06?18O-31.21 (Osoyoos) and
?2
H=7.03?18O-12.68 (West Kelowna). Surface waters of the Okanagan River system were
sources of irrigation water in the South Okanagan Basin valley and irrigation-return flow was the
primary source of recharge for shallow groundwaters. Fractured bedrock in highlands east and
west of the valley were not a significant source of recharge for shallow valley groundwater,
however, may recharge deeper, or basal, valley deposits. As irrigation-return flow controls
shallow groundwater dynamics in the valley sediments, groundwater quality is susceptible to
anthropogenic contamination. In Osoyoos, nitrate was present in shallow groundwaters at
concentrations of up to 24.4 mg/l N as a result of fertilizer nitrogen applied at the soil surface,
mostly at orchards. Two agricultural drainage systems in north Osoyoos discharge roughly
1,900 kg N/year from nitrate-contaminated groundwater directly into Osoyoos Lake and may
contribute in part to its eutrophication.
Key Words: isotopes, precipitation, surface water, regional hydrogeology, nitrate, groundwater,
agricultural drainage, semi-arid , water quality
Information Type thesis
Regional Watershed Okanagan
Sub-watershed if known
Aquifer #
Comments
Project status complete
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