Influence of Dynamic River Stage on The Vulnerability of Water Wells and Structure Foundations in Cold Regions
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Date
2023-07-12
Authors
Yin, Haoyu
Advisor
Rudolph, David
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of Waterloo
Abstract
Groundwater is important for people in Northern Canada, yet the groundwater protection protocols
and water well vulnerability assessments designed for other warmer regions of Canada may not be
applicable to communities in Northern Canada due to the unique hydrogeological characteristics
there. The seasonal melt of snow and ice leads to intense river stage fluctuations and might cause
flooding issues for the adjacent floodplain; however, their influences on the vulnerability of drinking
water wells and nearby infrastructure are not fully understood. This research considers a case study at
Carmacks, central Yukon, where an integrated surface-subsurface numerical modelling code was used
to examine these processes. The model results indicate that the annual variation in the river stage
temporarily reverses the direction of the hydraulic gradient between the surface water body and the
adjacent aquifer. Stream reaches that gain groundwater under lower river stages can become losing
streams during the high stage periods, which facilitates the transport of solute from the river to the
adjacent aquifer. Additionally, the model shows that the annual river stage variation can temporarily
alter the size and orientation of the region that contributes water to pumping wells, which means new
environmental threats could become important. In terms of travel time, the model results suggest that
annual river stage variation accelerates the transport of river-origin solutes to the adjacent aquifer, and
higher river peaks facilitate more rapid solute migration. Thus, the natural protection of the soil travel
path against microbial pathogens may become inefficient and water wells may become more
vulnerable. The model results also demonstrate that higher peak river stages are more likely to cause
basement inundation in buildings on the riverbank than average peaks, and that the duration of
basement inundation varies at different locations.
Description
Keywords
well vulnerability, river-connected aquifer, numerical model, river stage fluctuation, basement inundation, cold region