Abstract

The Cambrian-Vendian aquifer system is the most exploited groundwater resource in northern Estonia. As a result, the extensive use of groundwater has caused changes in the direction and velocity of groundwater flow in the Tallinn area. A ground- water flow and transport model of the Kopli Peninsula was built to investigate the upconing of saline water from an underlying layer, due to overexploitation of groundwater. A transient flow model was run in different flow regimes, using the pumping and water head data from the years 1946-2007. The vertical conductivity of crystalline rocks and the lower portion of Cambrian- Vendian rocks was found to be of the greatest importance for the range and shape of upconing phenomena. The results of the current study show that the range of the upconing process is dependent on the depth of the well screen interval. Therefore the results of many previous studies can be biased by the leaking of water from the underlying crystalline basement. The results also suggest that leakage from an underlying layer can be minimized by changing the screen depth of production wells.

Highlights

  • The Cambrian–Vendian aquifer system (CVAS) is the principal and the most dependable source for the public water supply in North Estonia (Vallner & Savitskaja 1997; Savitskaja 1999)

  • During calibration the critical parameters that rule the upconing process were gained in the Kopli Peninsula in the Tallinn area

  • Vertical conductivity of the crystalline basement and the lower portion of the CVAS was found to be of the greatest importance for the range and shape of the upconing phenomena

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Summary

Introduction

The Cambrian–Vendian aquifer system (CVAS) is the principal and the most dependable source for the public water supply in North Estonia (Vallner & Savitskaja 1997; Savitskaja 1999). On the basis of 13 000 water samples collected from various aquifers during the last 50 years major constituents and chemical types of groundwater were mapped in that study. Samples from both monitoring wells and production wells were used.

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