Resilience of inland freshwater lenses along the regulated Murray River at the Mallee Cliffs Salt Interception Scheme, NSW
Abstract
This research aims to demonstrate that inland freshwater lenses
along regulated rivers are more resilient to changes in nearby
groundwater pumping than anticipated. The study site at the
Mallee Cliffs Salt Interception Scheme (SIS) in NSW extracts
saline groundwater that naturally enters the Murray River due to
the shape of the Murray Basin. With the implementation of
salinity management strategies and drier weather conditions since
the 1990s, it is no longer necessary to continuously operate the
SIS. It was anticipated that a temporary shutdown of the SIS
would deteriorate the freshwater lens.
However, the freshwater lens was found be resilient to change
with the high degree of regulation in the Murray River at the
study site. The buoyancy allows the lens to maintain integrity
with the rising pressure in the underlying aquifer. Defining the
freshwater lens as resilient contradicts existing literature that
describes inland freshwater lenses as vulnerable. From this
research, a conceptual model was created that can be applied to
other SIS in semi-confined aquifers adjacent to the highly
regulated Murray River
The intensive monitoring program for this research into
freshwater lens can be adapted for long-term monitoring applied
to all 14 SIS operated by the Murray Darling Basin
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Keywords
groundwater, freshwater lens, Murray River, Mallee Cliffs, salinity, groundwater surface water interactions, aquifer, aquifer connectivity, salt interception scheme, salt, inland freshwater lens, river regulation, groundwater management, Murray Darling Basin, hydrogeochemistry, resistivity, Murray Darling Basin Authority, salinity management
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