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A multidisciplinary and integrated study comprising hydrogeology, hydrochemistry,
environmental isotopes, and numerical flow modeling has been carried out in the part of the Upper
Thal Doab, Indus Basin (Pakistan) to understand the mechanism of the groundwater flow system,
its suitability for municipal and agriculture use, surfacewater-groundwater interaction, recharge
mechanism and determination of groundwater residence time. The study area lies in the province
of Punjab and it is mainly consisted of Layyah district and some parts of Bhakkar, Muzaffargarh
and Jhang districts. It is bounded on the west by the River Indus and on the east by the Jhelum and
Chenab rivers.
Hydrogeological data collected from various sources has been utilized effectively with the support
of NeuraDB and PPDM, and efficient workflows that were developed in MS Visio software.
Spatial analysis and thematic mapping of the study area have been carried out using ESRI ArcGIS
software.
Twenty four (24) groundwater samples have been collected from the water table surfaces and also
beneath them at every 3.3 m (10 ft) intervals, which were analyzed for major cations (Na+, Ca2+,
Mg2+, K+) and anions (HCO3
-, Cl-, and SO4
2-) to evaluate the groundwater quality for municipal
and agriculture use. Different irrigation indices including Sodium Adsorption Ratio (SAR), Percent
Sodium (%Na), Residual Sodium Bicarbonate (RSBC), Kelly’s Index (KI), Permeability Index
(PI) and Potential Soil Salinity (PS) have been evaluated for classification and suitability of
groundwater to be used for irrigation purposes. Chemically analyzed data is projected graphically
on variety of plots including Piper, Durov, Ternary, Schoeller, Series plots, Wilcox, Depth Profile,
Radial, Stiff, and Pie charts with respect to the various depths of 50, 100, 150, 200, 250 and 300 m.
Thematic maps constructed (at the depth of 200 m) in GIS are used to evaluate the overall trend
and better understanding of the study area. This study infers different water types in the Upper
Thal Doab; most of them belong to water type of Na-Cl or K-HCO3. Other predominant
hydrogeochemical facies are Na-SO4, K-SO4, Mg-Cl, K-Cl, Na-HCO3, Mg-HCO3, Mg-SO4.
Electrical conductivity (EC) has shown a direct relationship with Sodium (Na+) and Total
Dissolved Solids (TDS) at various depths. Most of the samples indicate medium to very high
ii
salinity hazard based on TDS, EC, MAR, %Na and KI, and are thus considered unsuitable for
irrigation purposes.
Fifty eight (58) samples were used for stable isotopes (δ18O and δ2H) and forty three (43) for
radioactive isotopes (3H) to analyze surfacewater-groundwater interaction, study of recharge
mechanism and determination of residence time (age) of groundwater. The sampling points
included rivers, canals, hand pumps and tube wells (water wells). The rivers and canals represent
surface water (recharge source) while the hand pumps and tube wells represent the shallow and
deep groundwater respectively. This study yielded that groundwater is recharged mainly by Indus
Basin Irrigation System (IBIS) and rainfall. Furthermore, younger waters are available along the
Indus and Chenab Rivers up to greater depth and large areal extent.
Numerical groundwater flow modeling has been conducted using FEFLOW and run for both
steady-state and transient conditions. The steady-state model was calibrated with the
hydrogeological conditions of December 2002 when water levels in the aquifer were nearly in
equilibrium. The Parameter Estimation (PEST) program was used for the automatic calibration.
The calibrated model was used further to visualize the future groundwater behavior for the next 25
years as a predictive tool to quantify the potential impacts of specific stresses on potentiometric
heads and other model outputs over a period of time. Numerical groundwater modeling shows that
surrounding rivers (Indus and Chenab) and major irrigation canals along with their distributaries
are the major sources of groundwater recharge and responsible for any groundwater level changes
in the area. These developed models used as effective tools for evaluating better management
options for sustainable use of groundwater.
Integration of GIS with groundwater modeling provided an efficient way of analyzing and
monitoring groundwater. Different software including, AquaChem, AqQA, NeuraDB, MS Visio
and ArcGIS were used as an additive tool to develop supportive data for numerical groundwater
modeling, analyzing hydrochemical and isotopes data, managing groundwater data, integration and
presentation of modeling results. The overall results demonstrate that the application of GIS in
conjunction with hydrochemical analysis, isotopic study and numerical groundwater flow
modeling provided an excellent and powerful tool to study groundwater resources and design
suitable exploration and management schemes. |
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