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1.
Data Brief ; 31: 105708, 2020 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32462069

RESUMO

Magnetic Resonance Sounding (MRS) measurements are acquired at 16 stations in the Strengbach headwater catchment (Vosges Mountains - France). These data, rendering the vertical distribution of water contents in the subsurface, are used to show their potential in conditioning a hydrological model of the catchment, as described in the article "Magnetic resonance sounding measurements as posterior information to condition hydrological model parameters: Application to a hard-rock headwater catchment" - Journal of Hydrology (2020). Acquisition protocols follow a free induction decay scheme. Data are filtered by applying a band-pass filter at the Larmor frequency. A filter removing the 50 Hz noise is also applied with the exception of data at a Larmor frequency close to the 50 Hz harmonic. The signal envelopes are then fitted by a decaying exponential function over time to estimate the median characteristic relaxation time of each MRS sounding.

2.
Sci Total Environ ; 636: 260-272, 2018 Sep 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29705438

RESUMO

Estimating intermediate water residence times (a few years to a century) in shallow aquifers is critical to quantifying groundwater vulnerability to nutrient loading and estimating realistic recovery timelines. While intermediate groundwater residence times are currently determined with atmospheric tracers such as chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), these analyses are costly and would benefit from other tracer approaches to compensate for the decreasing resolution of CFC methods in the 5-20 years range. In this context, we developed a framework to assess the capacity of dissolved silica (DSi) to inform residence times in shallow aquifers. We calibrated silicate weathering rates with CFCs from multiple wells in five crystalline aquifers in Brittany and in the Vosges Mountains (France). DSi and CFCs were complementary in determining apparent weathering reactions and residence time distributions (RTDs) in shallow aquifers. Silicate weathering rates were surprisingly similar among Brittany aquifers, varying from 0.20 to 0.23 mg L-1 yr-1 with a coefficient of variation of 7%, except for the aquifer where significant groundwater abstraction occurred, where we observed a weathering rate of 0.31 mg L-1 yr-1. The silicate weathering rate was lower for the aquifer in the Vosges Mountains (0.12 mg L-1 yr-1), potentially due to differences in climate and anthropogenic solute loading. Overall, these optimized silicate weathering rates are consistent with previously published studies with similar apparent ages range. The consistency in silicate weathering rates suggests that DSi could be a robust and cheap proxy of mean residence times for recent groundwater (5-100 years) at the regional scale. This methodology could allow quantification of seasonal groundwater contributions to streams, estimation of residence times in the unsaturated zone and improve assessment of aquifer vulnerability to anthropogenic pollution.

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