Abstract

Abstract Collection, processing, and analysis of GIS and satellite data were performed in this work to estimate temporal groundwater recharge changes, which are needed as input in numerical groundwater-flow models. Layers of geological alignments, land use, drainage network, lithology, topography, and precipitation were collected. This information was spatialized, then layer importance was calculated using an Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP) based on infiltration capacity to define Potential Recharge (PR) regions. A water budget equation was used to calculate PR volumes. The analysis was done every five years from 1970-19, considering average urban area changes. For all study periods, an increase in urban area was calculated from 16 to 28% of the total study area, while potential recharge decreased from 23 to 19% of the mean precipitation values for each 5-year period. The most significant urban expansion was from 1980-94 and 2010-19, which match periods of potential recharge decrease. However, a slight increase in PR from 2000-09, unrelated to urban area change, may be due to temperature variations. The results account for the spatial and temporal dynamics of the recharge in the study area and can be used as input data to calibrate the actual recharge in a groundwater numerical model.

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