Abstract
The present study aims at analyzing groundwater quantity and quality simultaneously to identify its availability and suitability for irrigation. Various water quality indices were used to assess (i) origin of the groundwater sources (Gibbs diagram); (ii) salinity, alkalinity, and sodium hazard (sodium adsorption ratio, exchangeable sodium percentage, Kelly's ratio, US Salinity Laboratory diagram, Wilcox diagram); (iii) magnesium hazard (magnesium absorption ratio); (iv) carbonate and bicarbonate hazard (residual sodium carbonate); (v) hydro-chemical facie and evaluation (Piper diagram and Expanded Durov diagram); and (vi) statistical relationship among the variables, sample sites, and spatiotemporal grouping (principal component analysis and cluster analysis). The overall objective is to quantify the irrigation suitability of groundwater reserves. Gibb's diagram suggests that the groundwater quality is mainly controlled by rock-water interaction. Piper trilinear showed the presence of various types of hydro-chemical facies such as Ca-Mg-HCO3, mixed, and sodium bicarbonate. The expanded Durov diagram revealed the hydro-chemical evolution, grouping, and areal distribution of the groundwater samples. USSL diagram, Wilcox diagram, Kelly's ratio, magnesium hazard, and permeability index suggest that the groundwater quality is suitable for irrigation. Kaiser-Meyer-Olkin (KMO) and Bartlett's tests confirmed the applicability of principal component analysis (PCA), which indicates that groundwater quality is controlled by rock-water interaction mainly. It also suggests that the groundwater has carbonate dissolution, which indicates the groundwater's hardness increased. Cluster analysis (CA) from the year 2000 to 2010 shows 4 to 8 groups present within the study area. Irrigation water quality suitability map and predicted groundwater potential zone map together act as a master tool for deciding tube well location, pumping schedule, and crop planning for the sustainability of the agriculture eco-system in the study area. The implementation of the aforementioned activities in the study area will further stop the advancement of the seawater intrusion front. The methodology shows the potential applicability for similar coastal groundwater basins worldwide with or without modification.
Published Version
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