Abstract

Abstract Catchment-scale (>40 km 2 ) contamination of the Chalk aquifer of Hertfordshire by bromate, emanating from a disused industrial site north of St Albans, represents the largest occurrence of point-source groundwater contamination in the UK. The influences of ‘double porosity’ diffusive exchange and rapid transport along solution-enhanced conduits complicate predictive modelling of contaminant transport to threatened public supply wells. Tracer testing indicates that solution-enhanced flow routes exist beyond the surface distribution of dissolution features in Hertfordshire, more extensively than previously thought. A quantitative conceptual understanding of this flow system has been incorporated into a spatially distributed equivalent porous media representation in MODFLOW and MT3D-MS. The calibrated model reproduces essential features of the aquifer system, including heads and flows, seasonal responses, and the timing and spatial distribution of observed tracer breakthroughs in the solution-enhanced aquifer, but does not fully capture the magnitude and form of tracer and bromate advance. Due to the influence of local solution enhancement and matrix effects, detailed breakthroughs at receptors cannot be resolved at the coarse grid scale. However, the model is able to simulate general trends.

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