Abstract

The La Yarada aquifer is the primary water resource for municipal, irrigation, and industrial uses in the semi-arid Tacna, Peru. Presently, over-pumping has caused severe groundwater management problems, including the abandonment of saline water wells. This study presents multivariate analysis and chemical–isotopic trends in water to investigate seawater intrusion and hydrogeological processes affecting water quality. The chemical and isotopic analysis of water samples, collected in two campaigns in the dry (August 2020) and wet (November 2020) seasons, together with the 1988 data, were evaluated with a mixing model, cluster, and factor analysis. The hydrochemical and isotopic mixing model suggested the formation of a wedge with 20% seawater intrusion. The heterogeneity of piezometric map isolines corroborates the wedge formation associated with the groundwater movement. The spatial distributions of factors, FA1 and FA2, suggest two processes of seawater front movement: dispersion (diffusion) of chemical elements and different types of water mixing, respectively. At the edge of the La Yarada aquifer, the water head was relatively low, permitting seawater and freshwater mixing. On the other hand, along the sea-land boundary, the water head of the La Yarada aquifer was relatively high, avoiding seawater and freshwater mixing; however, the chemical species were migrating from the seawater to the groundwater due to the diffusion processes. The cluster 4 samples are in the region corresponding to the isotopic mixing process represented by the FA2, while cluster 4 describes the chemical diffusion process represented by the FA2. Thus, the integrated approach is helpful to assess the seawater intrusion mechanisms in coastal aquifers in a semi-arid region.

Highlights

  • In coastal aquifers, seawater intrusion is a challenging problem affecting groundwater management [1]

  • Since 1920, various graphic and statistical techniques have facilitated the homogeneous grouping of groundwater [10,11]

  • A multivariate statistical analysis was performed to characterize the dominant factors to understand the mechanism of seawater intrusion in the aquifer

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Summary

Introduction

Seawater intrusion is a challenging problem affecting groundwater management [1]. The encroachment of saline water into fresh groundwater has been a subject of extensive study for well over a century [9]. Werner and Simmons [16] illustrated the first-order assessment of seawater intrusion through a simple conceptual framework, classifying aquifers as flux-controlled and head-controlled systems. The present study implemented the integrated interdisciplinary approach [17] to characterize the spatiotemporal variations of water level and salt content in the La Yarada coastal aquifer in the vicinity of the Atacama Desert, Tacna, Peru. A multivariate statistical analysis was performed to characterize the dominant factors to understand the mechanism of seawater intrusion in the aquifer. An isotope–hydrochemical mixing method was employed to identify the salinization processes due to seawater intrusion in the aquifer

Location and Climate
Hydrogeological Settings
Analysis and Data Quality
Statistical Interpretation Procedure
Groundwater and Seawater Mixing Model
Discussion
Stable
Isotopic Composition Interpolation
Statistical
Correlation coefficient
Dendrogram derived using14
Naare in Table all clusters except for
Conceptual Model for Seawater Intrusion in Groundwater Salinization
The factor
Sama Basin Underground Connection
Rock Dissolution
Seawater Salinization Processes
Full Text
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