Abstract

Currently, monitoring programs designed for groundwater protection are mainly based on information from observation wells. This, however, creates a paradox, since identification of pollution in well water is clear evidence that the groundwater is already polluted. The poor state of contaminated aquifers all over the world, and the inability, in practice, to fully remediate contaminated aquifers suggest that groundwater monitoring alone has failed to provide the vital information required to prevent groundwater pollution. That said, groundwater pollution initiates on the land surface, and the contaminants have to traverse the unsaturated zone, long before reaching the water table. Therefore, monitoring programs that can provide real-time information on the hydraulic and chemical state of the unsaturated zone are essential for achieving early warnings of pollution potential and providing imperative protection from pollution hazards. Currently, most of the commercially available monitoring technologies are rather limited in their capability to provide early alerts of pollution processes taking place deep in the unsaturated zone, above the water table. Accordingly, monitoring technologies for the unsaturated zone have to be engineered as “off-the-shelf” commercial products, made available for application by practitioners in all fields of hydrology. From scientific and technological points of view, such ambitions are not out of reach. Yet they require an urgent call for a revolutionary shift in monitoring focus, from the groundwater itself to the unsaturated zone above it.

Highlights

  • The ParadoxPublic and political awareness of pollution’s impact on the deterioration of groundwater resources and the consequent risk to public health has led to active protection of groundwater resources from human-made pollution (EPA, 2004; EUR-LEX, 2006; Environmental Agency, 2018)

  • Though profiles based on sediment samples are fundamental and used in most studies related to the unsaturated zone, they have a very limited capability of providing the information that is required to protect groundwater from pollution hazards

  • The unsaturated zone is known for the critical role it plays in controlling groundwater quality

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Summary

Ofer Dahan*

Monitoring programs designed for groundwater protection are mainly based on information from observation wells. Monitoring programs that can provide real-time information on the hydraulic and chemical state of the unsaturated zone are essential for achieving early warnings of pollution potential and providing imperative protection from pollution hazards. Most of the commercially available monitoring technologies are rather limited in their capability to provide early alerts of pollution processes taking place deep in the unsaturated zone, above the water table. From scientific and technological points of view, such ambitions are not out of reach. They require an urgent call for a revolutionary shift in monitoring focus, from the groundwater itself to the unsaturated zone above it

The Paradox
Lost Battle
Urgent Call
Insights From Direct Monitoring of the Unsaturated Zone
Scientific Implications
DISCUSSION
Full Text
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