Title Isotopic evidence of aquifer recharge during the last ice age in Portugal
Author Galego Fernandes, P.; Carreira, P.M.
Author Affil Galego Fernandes, P., Instituto Tecnologico e Nuclear, Departamento Quimica, Sacavem, Portugal
Source Journal of Hydrology, 361(3-4), p.291- 308, . Publisher: Elsevier, Amsterdam, Netherlands. ISSN: 0022-1694
Publication Date Nov. 15, 2008
Notes In English. Based on Publisher- supplied data GeoRef Acc. No: 300053
Index Terms radioactive age determination; carbon isotopes; geochemistry; ground water; hydrogeochemistry; hydrogen; isotopes; oxygen isotopes; oxygen; paleoclimatology; Pleistocene; radioactive isotopes; Portugal; absolute age; aquifers; C-14; carbon; Cenozoic; coastal aquifers; D/H; Eocene; Europe; glacial environment; hydrochemistry; Iberian Peninsula; isotope ratios; Miocene; Neogene; O-18; Paleogene; paleohydrology; Pliocene; Quaternary; recharge; Sado River; Southern Europe; southwestern Portugal; stable isotopes; Tertiary; tritium; upper Pleistocene
Abstract The present paper will focus on the research that has been conducted in the palaeowaters in the South of Portugal, Alentejo region. Three flow directions were identified in Sado sedimentary basin aquifer: S-N, SW-NE and SE-NW; the last two result from Palaeozoic substratum irregularities, corresponding to an impermeable tectonic structure (horst). Two aquifers showing different isotopic composition were identified and analysed: the Eocene and the Plio-Miocene. The Plio-Miocene aquifer has an average isotopic composition of -29.6±1.3 ppm in deuterium and -4.65±0.28 ppm in oxygen-18, and the Eocene has average values of deuterium of -28.7±2.1 ppm and -4.81±0.11 ppm for oxygen-18. In single cases show that the range of isotopic values overlap for the two aquifers, probably as a result of the exploitation in some wells by a mixture of waters from both aquifers. The spatial distribution of 3H and 14C obtained in the Plio-Miocene waters indicates a flow path from S to N, with recent waters near the southern border of the basin and older waters to the N near the Sado River. The recharge of this aquifer system is diffuse and is dispersed over the entire basin. Groundwater samples from the two aquifers having similar apparent 14C ages have distinct isotopic compositions, with the Eocene aquifer showing an enriched composition relatively to the Plio-Miocene aquifer. This suggests that recharge of the Eocene waters could have occurred under different climatic conditions.
URL http://hdl.handle.net/10.1016/j.jhydrol.2008.07.046
Publication Type journal article
Record ID 64004732