Separating baseline conditions from anthropogenic impacts: example of the Damour coastal aquifer (Lebanon)

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Taylor and Francis Ltd.

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Abstract: A new structured approach is presented to derive groundwater baseline conditions, in this case for a dolomitic limestone aquifer suffering from salinization and other anthropogenic impacts. It builds on the HydroChemical System Analysis (HCSA) to map different groundwater bodies (hydrosomes) and hydrochemical zones within them, each of which show significant differences in baseline conditions. It also comprises a rigorous elimination scheme for samples affected by bias or pollution. The method is applied to the Damour coastal aquifer system, south of Beirut (Lebanon). Concentrations of Cl, Cl/Br, 2H, 18O and Ca/Sr were used to discern five hydrosomes and to determine mixing ratios. The dominant hydrochemical facies was (sub)oxic, calcareous and salinized, indicating a very low reduction capacity of the aquifer system, strong dissolution of dolomitic limestone and clear traces of seawater encroachment. The method proposed was capable of filtering out baseline conditions for 16 main constituents, 64 trace elements and two isotopes. © 2014 IAHS Press.

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Baseline chemistry, Groundwater mapping, Lebanon, Multi-tracing, Salinization, System analysis, Beirut, Beyrouth, Aquifers, Chemical analysis, Groundwater, Groundwater resources, Isotopes, Limestone, Systems analysis, Trace elements, Anthropogenic impacts, Base-line conditions, Coastal aquifer systems, Groundwater mappings, Hydrochemical facies, Anthropogenic effect, Baseline conditions, Coastal aquifer, Concentration (composition), Dissolution, Hydrochemistry, Mixing ratio, Seawater, Trace element

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