6 research outputs found
Conceptual model of groundwater quality for the monitoring and management of the Voronka groundwater body, Estonia
A fundamental knowledge of processes that control groundwater composition is required for informed management of water quality. The Voronka groundwater body in northeastern Estonia represents a good example of a complicated, overexploited groundwater system where conceptual understanding of baseline quality and governing hydrogeochemical processes can support sustainable aquifer management. A conceptual understanding or conceptual model is a simplified representation or a working understanding of the real hydrogeological system and its processes. The baseline chemical composition of the Voronka groundÂwater body was formed during the last glaciations, when glacial meltwater intruded into water-bearing rocks. Two main processes that can change Voronka groundwater body quality at the present day are: (1) seawater intrusion and (2) water exchange between buried valleys and formationâs groundwater. Future monitoring and management should focus on changes in the natural composition of groundwater caused by abstraction. The HCO3â/Clâ value is the best parameter to describe the fluctuations in natural backÂground chemistry in the Voronka groundwater body and to assess significant trends induced by abstraction. In case of the discovered trends, a suite of isotope methods, especially 14C, 3H, ÎŽ2H, ÎŽ18O and ÎŽ13C, can be used to detect whether the intrusion of seawater or exchange of water with buried valleys is taking place
Lithology and diagenesis of the poorly consolidated Cambrian siliciclastic sediments in the northern Baltic Sedimentary Basin
The present study discusses lithology and diagenetic characteristics of the siliciclastic Cambrian and the enclosing Ediacaran and Ordovician deposits in the northern Baltic Sedimentary Basin (BSB). The Neoproterozoic and Lower Palaeozoic sediments are despite their age unconsolidated with primary porosity of 20-25% for both shales and sandstones. The sparse Fe-dolomite cementation of arenitic and subarenitic sandstones and siltstones occurs mainly at lithological contacts with the massive Ediacaran and Lower Cambrian claystones and is probably related to ions released during llitization. In contrast to weak mechanical and chemical compaction of sandstone, the clay mineral diagenesis of Cambrian deposits is well advanced. The highly illitic (80-90%) nature of illite-smectite (I-S) suggests evolved diagenetic grade of sediments which conflicts with shallow maximum burial and low compaction. Smectite-to-illite transformation has resulted in formation of diagenetic Fe-rich chlorite in claystones. Some porosity reduction of sandstones is due to formation of authigenic kaolinite at the expense of detrital mica or K-feldspar