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A mechanistic study of nonlinear solute transport in a groundwater–surface water system Under steady state and transient hydraulic conditions

Michel C. Boufadel
- 01 Sep 2000 - 
- Vol. 36, Iss: 9, pp 2549-2565
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TLDR
In this article, the effects of tides and buoyancy on beach hydraulics in the presence of a seaward groundwater flow due to an elevated “regional” water table were investigated.
Abstract
Two laboratory experiments were conducted to investigate the effects of tides and buoyancy on beach hydraulics in the presence of a seaward groundwater flow due to an elevated “regional” water table. In the first experiment, case 1, the difference in concentration between the salt water at sea and the water of the regional aquifer was small, 2.4 g L−1, such that it did not engender density gradients; the salt acts as a tracer in this case. In the second experiment, case 2, the difference was ∼32.0 g L−1, which creates a significant density gradient. This case corresponds to the presence of fresh groundwater in the subsurface of the coasts of the continental United States. The experiments were numerically simulated by the marine unsaturated (MARUN) model, a numerical model for density-and-viscosity-dependent flows in two-dimensional variably saturated media. The long-term experimental and numerical results showed that the seawater plume entered the beach from the sea and occupied most of the intertidal zone. The maximum depth of the seawater plume was near the midsection of the intertidal zone, and it decreased near the low and high tide lines. When viewed in the context of case 2, these results indicate an inverted salinity distribution in beaches subjected to tides with salt water from sea overtopping the freshwater lens. For both cases, water from the regional aquifer moved seaward beneath the seawater in the intertidal zone and pinched out near the low tide mark. We also noted that beach hydraulics are highly two dimensional with water entering the beach at a near-vertical angle and leaving it at a near-horizontal angle, which casts doubts on analyses of beach hydraulics based on the Dupuit assumption. Findings from this work have direct implications within the practice of bioremediation of oil spills on beaches. We found that applying dissolved nutrients on the beach surface at low tide is superior to applying them in a trench landward of the beach. This is because the residence time of the nutrient plume in the bioremediation zone of the beach in the prior situation is longer than that in the latter.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Seawater intrusion processes, investigation and management: Recent advances and future challenges

TL;DR: A review of the state of the art in sea intrusion research can be found in this article, where the authors subdivide SI research into three categories: process, mea- surement, prediction and management.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of tidal forcing on a subterranean estuary

TL;DR: In this article, a numerical study of the dynamics in a subterranean estuary subject to tidal forcing is presented, showing that salt transport associated with tidally driven seawater recirculation leads to the formation of an upper saline plume in the intertidal region.
Journal ArticleDOI

Long-term persistence of oil from the Exxon Valdez spill in two-layer beaches

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present field data and numerical simulations of a two-layered beach with a small freshwater recharge in the contaminated area, where a high permeability upper layer is underlain by a low-permeability lower layer, and find that the upper layer temporarily stored the oil, while it slowly and continuously filled the lower layer wherever the water table dropped below the interface of the two layers, as a result of low freshwater recharge from the land.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of wave forcing on a subterranean estuary

TL;DR: In this paper, a hydrodynamic model based on the shallow water equations was used to simulate dynamic sea level oscillations driven by wave and tide, where variably-saturated, variable-density flow was modeled.
Journal ArticleDOI

Saltwater‐freshwater mixing dynamics in a sandy beach aquifer over tidal, spring‐neap, and seasonal cycles

TL;DR: In this paper, a field and numerical modeling study was conducted over a 1 year timeframe to investigate the combined effects of tidal stage, spring-neap variability in tidal amplitude, and seasonal inland water table oscillations on intertidal salinity and flow dynamics within a tide-dominated, microtidal sandy beach aquifer.
References
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Book

CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics

TL;DR: CRC handbook of chemistry and physics, CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, CRC handbook as discussed by the authors, CRC Handbook for Chemistry and Physiology, CRC Handbook for Physics,
Journal ArticleDOI

A closed-form equation for predicting the hydraulic conductivity of unsaturated soils

TL;DR: Van Genuchten et al. as mentioned in this paper proposed a closed-form analytical expression for predicting the hydraulic conductivity of unsaturated soils based on the Mualem theory, which can be used to predict the unsaturated hydraulic flow and mass transport in unsaturated zone.
Book

Dynamics of fluids in porous media

Jacob Bear
TL;DR: In this paper, the Milieux poreux Reference Record was created on 2004-09-07, modified on 2016-08-08 and the reference record was updated in 2016.
Book

Computational Fluid Mechanics and Heat Transfer

TL;DR: In this paper, a reference record was created on 2005-11-18, modified on 2016-08-08 and used for CFD-based transfert de chaleur.
Journal ArticleDOI

Handbook of chemistry

Norbert Adolph Lange
- 01 Jul 1944 - 
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