Abstract

Groundwater in upland floodplains has an important function in regulating river flows and controlling the coupling of hillslope runoff with rivers, with complex interaction between surface waters and groundwaters throughout floodplain width and depth. Heterogeneity is a key feature of upland floodplain hydrogeology and influences catchment water flows, but it is difficult to characterise and therefore is often simplified or overlooked. An upland floodplain and adjacent hillslope in the Eddleston catchment, southern Scotland (UK), has been studied through detailed three-dimensional geological characterisation, the monitoring of ten carefully sited piezometers, and analysis of locally collected rainfall and river data. Lateral aquifer heterogeneity produces different patterns of groundwater level fluctuation across the floodplain. Much of the aquifer is strongly hydraulically connected to the river, with rapid groundwater level rise and recession over hours. Near the floodplain edge, however, the aquifer is more strongly coupled with subsurface hillslope inflows, facilitated by highly permeable solifluction deposits in the hillslope–floodplain transition zone. Here, groundwater level rise is slower but high heads can be maintained for weeks, sometimes with artesian conditions, with important implications for drainage and infrastructure development. Vertical heterogeneity in floodplain aquifer properties, to depths of at least 12 m, can create local aquifer compartmentalisation with upward hydraulic gradients, influencing groundwater mixing and hydrogeochemical evolution. Understanding the geological processes controlling aquifer heterogeneity, which are common to formerly glaciated valleys across northern latitudes, provides key insights into the hydrogeology and wider hydrological behaviour of upland floodplains.

Highlights

  • Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.The processes controlling water flow, and in particular subsurface flows, from a hillslope through the floodplain to a river, are still not fully understood, including in meso-scale, upland catchments where most runoff is generated (e.g. Tetzlaff et al 2014; Blume and Meerveld 2015)

  • This paper addresses the influence that geological structure and heterogeneity have on groundwater in a floodplain and adjacent hillslope, floodplain and river

  • Most of the floodplain is capped by a layer of silt and/or clay, 0.5–2 m thick, interpreted as overbank alluvial deposits

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Summary

Introduction

The processes controlling water flow, and in particular subsurface flows, from a hillslope through the floodplain to a river, are still not fully understood, including in meso-scale, upland catchments where most runoff is generated Scheliga et al 2018), and to predict catchment hydrological dynamics at the resolution needed for environmental, including flood, management. This is of increasing importance in many northern latitudes, including the UK, given anthropogenic catchment modifications and escalating extreme weather events that are changing patterns, amounts and rates of runoff generation (Hannaford and Buys 2012; Pattison and Lane 2012).

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