Visualisation modelling in 3D of an alluvial aquifer system at a valley-wide scale to understand groundwater status : Lockyer, QLD


Autoria(s): Cox, Malcolm; Hawke, Amy; James, Allan; Young, Joseph A.
Data(s)

01/10/2010

Resumo

Visualisation provides a method to efficiently convey and understand the complex nature and processes of groundwater systems. This technique has been applied to the Lockyer Valley to aid in comprehending the current condition of the system. The Lockyer Valley in southeast Queensland hosts intensive irrigated agriculture sourcing groundwater from alluvial aquifers. The valley is around 3000 km2 in area and the alluvial deposits are typically 1-3 km wide and to 20-35 m deep in the main channels, reducing in size in subcatchments. The configuration of the alluvium is of a series of elongate “fingers”. In this roughly circular valley recharge to the alluvial aquifers is largely from seasonal storm events, on the surrounding ranges. The ranges are overlain by basaltic aquifers of Tertiary age, which overall are quite transmissive. Both runoff from these ranges and infiltration into the basalts provided ephemeral flow to the streams of the valley. Throughout the valley there are over 5,000 bores extracting alluvial groundwater, plus lesser numbers extracting from underlying sandstone bedrock. Although there are approximately 2500 monitoring bores, the only regularly monitored area is the formally declared management zone in the lower one third. This zone has a calibrated Modflow model (Durick and Bleakly, 2000); a broader valley Modflow model was developed in 2002 (KBR), but did not have extensive extraction data for detailed calibration. Another Modflow model focused on a central area river confluence (Wilson, 2005) with some local production data and pumping test results. A recent subcatchment simulation model incorporates a network of bores with short-period automated hydrographic measurements (Dvoracek and Cox, 2008). The above simulation models were all based on conceptual hydrogeological models of differing scale and detail.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/38696/

Relação

http://www.groundwater2010.com/

Cox, Malcolm, Hawke, Amy, James, Allan, & Young, Joseph A. (2010) Visualisation modelling in 3D of an alluvial aquifer system at a valley-wide scale to understand groundwater status : Lockyer, QLD. In National Groundwater Conference 2010, 31st Oct - 4th Nov, National Convention Centre, Canberra. (Unpublished)

Fonte

Biogeoscience; Division of Technology, Information and Learning Support; Faculty of Science and Technology; High Performance Computing and Research Support

Palavras-Chave #040399 Geology not elsewhere classified #080603 Conceptual Modelling #Groundwater #visualisation #hydrogeology #Lockyer
Tipo

Conference Paper