4 research outputs found
Observed controls on resilience of groundwater to climate variability in sub-Saharan Africa
Groundwater in sub-Saharan Africa supports livelihoods and poverty alleviation1,2, maintains vital ecosystems, and strongly influences terrestrial water and energy budgets. Yet the hydrological processes that govern groundwater recharge and sustainabilityâand their sensitivity to climatic variabilityâare poorly constrained4. Given the absence of firm observational constraints, it remains to be seen whether model-based projections of decreased water resources in dry parts of the region4 are justified. Here we show, through analysis of multidecadal groundwater hydrographs across sub-Saharan Africa, that levels of aridity dictate the predominant recharge processes, whereas local hydrogeology influences the type and sensitivity of precipitationârecharge relationships. Recharge in some humid locations varies by as little as five per cent (by coefficient of variation) across a wide range of annual precipitation values. Other regions, by contrast, show roughly linear precipitationârecharge relationships, with precipitation thresholds (of roughly ten millimetres or less per day) governing the initiation of recharge. These thresholds tend to rise as aridity increases, and recharge in drylands is more episodic and increasingly dominated by focused recharge through losses from ephemeral overland flows. Extreme annual recharge is commonly associated with intense rainfall and flooding events, themselves often driven by large-scale climate controls. Intense precipitation, even during years of lower overall precipitation, produces some of the largest years of recharge in some dry subtropical locations. Our results therefore challenge the âhigh certaintyâ consensus regarding decreasing water resources in such regions of sub-Saharan Africa. The potential resilience of groundwater to climate variability in many areas that is revealed by these precipitationârecharge relationships is essential for informing reliable predictions of climate-change impacts and adaptation strategies
Typologie des courbes de sondages électriques verticaux pour reconnaissance des formations superficielles et leur incidence en hydrogéologie de socle cristallin du Burkina Faso
Au Burkina Faso, les reconnaissances des formations superficielles du sol ont Ă©tĂ© faites Ă lâaide de la mĂ©thode Ă©lectrique des rĂ©sistivitĂ©s (dispositif Schlumberger). Le recalage des donnĂ©es de sondages gĂ©ophysiques avec les observations et reconnaissance de terrain ainsi que les coupes de forages hydrauliques a permis de distinguer sept (7) allures principales de courbes de sondages Ă©lectriques verticaux. Des applications hydrogĂ©ologiques de cette classification ont Ă©tĂ© dĂ©gagĂ©es selon le contexte gĂ©ologique