4.7 Article

Transient groundwater dynamics in a coastal aquifer: The effects of tides, the lunar cycle, and the beach profile

Journal

WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH
Volume 49, Issue 5, Pages 2473-2488

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/wrcr.20075

Keywords

coastal aquifer; submarine groundwater discharge; seawater intrusion; density-dependent flow model; spring-neap tidal cycle; beach profile; groundwater age simulation

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Key Points The intertidal saline cell is not a permanent feature of a coastal aquifer The intertidal saline cell cycle is linked to the lunar cycle of tides The cell cycle modulates the fresh and salt groundwater fluxes to the ocean Detailed field measurements are combined with a numerical modeling to characterize the groundwater dynamics beneath the discharge zone at Waquoit Bay, Massachusetts. Groundwater salinity values revealed a saline circulation cell that overlaid the discharging freshwater and grew and disappeared with the lunar cycle. The cell was initiated by a greater bay water infiltration during the new moon when high tides overtopped the mean high-tide mark, flooding the flatter beach berm and inundating a larger area of the beach. The dynamics of this cell were further characterized by a tracer test and by constructing a density-dependent flow model constrained to salinity and head data. The numerical model captured the growing and diminishing behavior of the circulation cell and provided the estimates of freshwater and saline water fluxes and travel times. Furthermore, the model enabled quantification of the relationship between the characteristics of the observed tidal cycle (maximum, minimum, and mean tidal elevations) and the different components of the groundwater circulation (freshwater discharge, intertidal saline cycling, and deep saline cycling). We found that (1) recharge to the intertidal saline cell is largely controlled by the high-tide elevation; (2) freshwater discharge is positively correlated to the low-tide elevation, whereas deep saline discharge from below the discharging freshwater is negatively correlated to the low-tide elevation. So, when the low-tide elevation is relatively high, more freshwater discharges and less deep saltwater discharges. In contrast when low tides are very low, less freshwater discharges and more deep salt water discharges; (3) offshore inflow of saline water is largely insensitive to tides and the lunar cycle.

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