San Salvador Island is a small isolated carbonate platform on the southeastern edge of the Bahamian Archipelago. The Line Hole well field is located on an eogenetic karst aquifer on San Salvador Island's northern coast. The island's negative water budget and extensive lake cover have resulted in the upconing of saline water that has fragmented the once continuous freshwater lens. The Line Hole well field consists of several 15-cm diameter wells drilled into the fresh-water lens and arranged in a line perpendicular to the shore. The well field also has two monitoring wells (LH 1, and LH 13), that penetrate approximately 7 m below the water table into higher salinity groundwater. The well field was abandoned in 2016 upon saltwater intrusion to the aquifer. To evaluate the connectivity between the eogenetic karst aquifer monitored by the Line Hole well field and the ocean, we instrumented wells with HOBO U20L-04 loggers to measure pressure and temperature timeseries. We instrumented wells LH4, and LH8, in addition to the monitoring wells LH1 and LH13.
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Using δ18O and δ2H to Detect Hydraulic Connection Between a Sinkhole Lake and a First‐Magnitude Spring
Oxygen and hydrogen isotopes were used in this study to detect a hydraulic connection between a sinkhole lake and a karst spring. In karst areas, surface water that flows to a lake can drain through sinkholes in the lakebed to the underlying aquifer, and then flows in karst conduits and through aquifer matrix. At the study site located in northwest Florida, USA, Lake Miccosukee immediately drains into two sinkholes. Results from a dye tracing experiment indicates that lake water discharges at Natural Bridge Spring, a first-magnitude spring 32 km downgradient from the lake. By collecting weekly water samples from the lake, the spring, and a groundwater well 10 m away from the lake during the dry period between October 2019 and January 2020, it was found that, when rainfall effects on isotopic signature in spring water are removed, increased isotope ratios of spring water can be explained by mixing of heavy-isotope-enriched lake water into groundwater, indicating hydraulic connection between the lake and the spring. Such a detection of hydraulic connection at the scale of tens of kilometers and for a first-magnitude spring has not been previously reported in the literature. Based on the isotope ratio data, it was estimated that, during the study period, about 8.5% the spring discharge was the lake water that drained into the lake sinkholes.
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- Award ID(s):
- 1828827
- PAR ID:
- 10262189
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Groundwater
- ISSN:
- 0017-467X
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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