Abstract
Abstract In 1998, as part of the process to assess the suitability of a site near Sellafield, Cumbria, for a deep geological repository for solid intermediate level and some solid low-level radioactive waste, United Kingdom Nirex Limited (Nirex) commissioned a study into the seasonal fluctuations in groundwater pressure observed in many of the monitoring boreholes in the area. Many of the monitoring zones in the deep boreholes at Sellafield show some response in groundwater pressure to annual variations in recharge. These seasonal fluctuations were quantified in terms of amplitude and lag over two full recharge cycles (1994–1996). The extremely detailed monitoring array installed by Nirex at the potential repository zone gives a unique opportunity to observe in detail the attenuation of the recharge signal, as it is propagated vertically downwards through the Sherwood Sandstone Group and into the underlying basement rocks. Use of an analytical approach to model the data provides constraints on values of the vertical diffusivity of the strata. The values of hydraulic formation parameters derived by this methodology are broadly consistent with results from borehole testing, though somewhat higher. This may in part be due to the large scale associated with the cyclic recharge signal. The attenuation of the seasonal fluctuations in three dimensions (3D) throughout the study area provides information at a scale suitable for use in constraining regional flow models.
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