29 research outputs found

    Hydrochemical system analysis of public supply well fields, to reveal water-quality patterns and define groundwater bodies:The Netherlands

    Get PDF
    Hydrochemical system analysis (HCSA) is used to better understand the individual state of and spatial patterns in groundwater quality, by addressing the spatial distribution of groundwater bodies with specific origins (hydrosomes) and characteristic hydrochemical zones within each hydrosome (facies). The origin is determined by environmental tracers or geomorphological and potentiometric maps, the facies by combining age, redox and alkalinity indices. The HCSA method is applied to all 206 active public supply well fields (PSWFs) in The Netherlands, resulting in the distinction of nine hydrosomes and eleven facies parameters-age (young, intermediate, old), redox ((sub)oxic, anoxic, deep anoxic, mixed) and alkalinity (very low, low, intermediate and high). The resulting classification of PSWFs provides a means to (1) predict their vulnerability; (2) optimize groundwater-quality monitoring programs; and (3) better delineate groundwater bodies, by considering groundwater origin and flow. The HCSA translates complex hydrochemical patterns into easily interpretable maps by showing PSWFs, groundwater bodies and hydrochemical facies. Such maps facilitate communication between researchers, water resources managers and policy makers and can help to solve complex groundwater resources management problems at different scales, ranging from a single well(field) or region to the national or European scale. © 2010 Springer-Verlag

    Functional Interactions between KCNE1 C-Terminus and the KCNQ1 Channel

    Get PDF
    The KCNE1 gene product (minK protein) associates with the cardiac KvLQT1 potassium channel (encoded by KCNQ1) to create the cardiac slowly activating delayed rectifier, IKs. Mutations throughout both genes are linked to the hereditary cardiac arrhythmias in the Long QT Syndrome (LQTS). KCNE1 exerts its specific regulation of KCNQ1 activation via interactions between membrane-spanning segments of the two proteins. Less detailed attention has been focused on the role of the KCNE1 C-terminus in regulating channel behavior. We analyzed the effects of an LQT5 point mutation (D76N) and the truncation of the entire C-terminus (Δ70) on channel regulation, assembly and interaction. Both mutations significantly shifted voltage dependence of activation in the depolarizing direction and decreased IKs current density. They also accelerated rates of channel deactivation but notably, did not affect activation kinetics. Truncation of the C-terminus reduced the apparent affinity of KCNE1 for KCNQ1, resulting in impaired channel formation and presentation of KCNQ1/KCNE1 complexes to the surface. Complete saturation of KCNQ1 channels with KCNE1-Δ70 could be achieved by relative over-expression of the KCNE subunit. Rate-dependent facilitation of K+ conductance, a key property of IKs that enables action potential shortening at higher heart rates, was defective for both KCNE1 C-terminal mutations, and may contribute to the clinical phenotype of arrhythmias triggered by heart rate elevations during exercise in LQTS mutations. These results support several roles for KCNE1 C-terminus interaction with KCNQ1: regulation of channel assembly, open-state destabilization, and kinetics of channel deactivation

    HYDROCHEMISTRY, STABLE ISOTOPES AND PALEOHYDROLOGY OF THE COASTAL AQUIFER NEAR RAVENNA (ITALY)

    No full text
    A hydrochemical and stable oxygen and hydrogen isotope analysis in combination with a study of the paleo- hydrology provides insight in to the current hydrochemistry of the coastal aquifer near Ravenna Italy, with emphasis on the cause of the high salinity present all throughout the aquifer. Two hundred and twenty nine samples of ground and surface water were analyzed for major cat ions, anions and stable oxygen and hydrogen isotopes. The samples were grouped according to sampling environment to see if waters coming from the same background (new or old dunes, lagoons, agricultural fields, quarries, and rivers) showed the same hydrochemistry. The most occurring water type based on the classification of Stuyfzand (1989) is the brackish to saline NaCl type. Calcium rich water is found only in the rivers, in the irrigation channels and in a few wells. The stable isotope analysis and the analysis of tracers such as SO4/Cl- and 18O versus Cl show that most ground water samples are a mix between fresh water similar to rain or irrigation, river or fresh dune water and water that is similar to current Adriatic Sea water. Two groups of samples have an anomalous chemical and isotope signature that does not reflect pure mixing of fresh with seawater: One group is chemically very similar to waters that are trapped in sediments of the North Sea marshes during the Holocene transgression while the other group of samples is derived in and around current lagoons. Analysis of the paleo-hydrology shows that our coastal aquifer was formed during the Holocene transgression. As the sea regressed fresh water infiltrated into the sandy deposits but because recharge areas were small and the amount was reduced by evapotranspiration of pine trees since Roman times, there was not enough infiltration to flush the aquifer completely

    Wet dune slacks: decline and new opportunities

    Get PDF
    For a number of infiltrated coastal dune areas it is discussed to what extent artificial infiltration for the public water supply affects the quality of soil, groundwater and vegetation around pools and ponds, and what its effect is on the vegetation. Further, the results of investigations into the quality of vegetation, soil and water of a number of non-infiltrated, less affected dune areas are presented. The emphasis is on changes in groundwater flow pattern and on changes in the chemical composition of groundwater on the vegetation of wet dune slacks. Finally, recommendations for the management of wet dune slacks are presented. It can be concluded that the introduction of nutrients through infiltration causes an abundance of nitrophilous herbaceous vegetation along the banks of all infiltration ponds and most dune pools. Of the three investigated macro-nutrients, nitrate, potassium and phosphate, the latter shows the most significant correlation with the composition, cover and biomass of the vegetation. The moist biotopes of non-infiltrated dunes have largely disappeared because of desiccation, mainly as a consequence of water withdrawal, afforestation and coastal erosion. Relatively unaffected dune slacks can be found in the dunes on the Dutch Wadden Sea islands and a small number of dune areas on the mainland. In most areas, however, a serious decline in many rare species has been observed during the past twenty years because of eutrophic and acid precipitation, often in combination with disturbances of the groundwater regime.
    corecore