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Interaction of soil water and groundwater during the freezing–thawing cycle: field observations and numerical modeling

Authors :
Xiao-Wei Jiang
Yijian Zeng
Xu-Sheng Wang
Hong Yu Xie
Si Hai Liang
Li Wan
Shu Cong Tan
Department of Water Resources
UT-I-ITC-WCC
Faculty of Geo-Information Science and Earth Observation
Source :
Hydrology and Earth System Sciences, Vol 25, Pp 4243-4257 (2021), Hydrology and earth system sciences, 25(8), 4243-4257. Copernicus
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Copernicus GmbH, 2021.

Abstract

Freezing-induced groundwater-level decline is widely observed in regions with a shallow water table, but many existing studies on freezing-induced groundwater migration do not account for freezing-induced water-level fluctuations. Here, by combining detailed field observations of liquid soil water content and groundwater-level fluctuations at a site in the Ordos Plateau, China, and numerical modeling, we showed that the interaction of soil water and groundwater dynamics was controlled by wintertime atmospheric conditions and topographically driven lateral groundwater inflow. With an initial water table depth of 120 cm and a lateral groundwater inflow rate of 1.03 mm d−1, the observed freezing and thawing-induced fluctuations of soil water content and groundwater level are well reproduced. By calculating the budget of groundwater, the mean upward flux of freezing-induced groundwater loss is 1.46 mm d−1 for 93 d, while the mean flux of thawing-induced groundwater recharge is as high as 3.94 mm d−1 for 32 d. These results could be useful for local water resources management when encountering seasonally frozen soils and for future studies on two- or three-dimensional transient groundwater flow in semi-arid and seasonally frozen regions. By comparing models under a series of conditions, we found the magnitude of freezing-induced groundwater loss decreases with initial water table depth and increases with the rate of groundwater inflow. We also found a fixed-head lower boundary condition would overestimate freezing-induced groundwater migration when the water table depth is shallow. Therefore, an accurate characterization of freezing-induced water table decline is critical to quantifying the contribution of groundwater to hydrological and ecological processes in cold regions.

Details

ISSN :
16077938 and 10275606
Volume :
25
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Hydrology and Earth System Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c55438fbde96f5dfc95e7f3f1e6f26c6