Abstract

Groundwater resource management in the urban area is one of the important aspects because of growing population demand and having inadequate water supply. So, proper information is needed to manage the future urban planning for such kinds of areas. This study emphasizes groundwater potentiality zone (GPZ) assessment in the Asansol urban agglomeration (AUA) region, West Bengal, India. For this purpose, we have incorporated eight conditioning factors namely LULC, lithology, slope, elevation, rainfall, drainage density, lineaments density, and soil map using conventional and remote sensing data in GIS software. All these conditioning factors have been reclassified in ArcGIS and processed by the fuzzy analytical hierarchy process (FAHP), frequency ratio (FR), and Bayesian weights of evidence (BWOE) statistical methods. Then, the groundwater potential index has been formulated, and finally, GPZ maps are generated based on of selected three models. The result shows that very high area of GPZ, e.g. 9.13%, 11.62% and 7.43% are under BWOE, FR and FAHP models, respectively. The receiver operating characteristic validation curves show that FR method (AUC = 96.4%) is well obtained for GPZ in comparison with both BWOE (AUC = 83.8%) and FAHP methods (AUC = 82.9%). Therefore, this statistical method is highly recommended for the study of groundwater potential assessment and this outcome is very suitable for the groundwater resources management in future land use planning. Precautionary works in low potential areas should be given priority for long-term planning. Thus, this study can be considered as a good document for decision support in water exploitation planning and sustainable groundwater management in AUA region.

Highlights

  • Groundwater is one of the precious entities in nature that occupying the pore and fracture space under the geological stratum (Naghibi et al 2015)

  • The rank for Digital Elevation Model (DEM) classes is decreasing following the numerical values of the thematic layer

  • The WWF-India reported that the 30 cities in India will face a grave water risk by 2050 due to sharp increase in population

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Summary

Introduction

Groundwater is one of the precious entities in nature that occupying the pore and fracture space under the geological stratum (Naghibi et al 2015). It plays a significant role in terms of environmental, economic and human wellbeing throughout the world (IPCC 2001; Mallick et al 2019). Applied Water Science (2022) 12:63 delineation is a prerequisite to identify the site suitability for the future urban residential zone (Mallick and Rudra 2021a). Identify the groundwater store and movement under the geological stratum (Ozdemir 2011; Rahmati et al 2014; Tiwari et al 2019; Oh et al 2011; Mallick et al 2014) Geology, slope, topographical and lithological variation, elevation, soil type, drainage, and lineament, rainfall, distance from the river, land use and land cover, etc. identify the groundwater store and movement under the geological stratum (Ozdemir 2011; Rahmati et al 2014; Tiwari et al 2019; Oh et al 2011; Mallick et al 2014)

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