4.7 Article

Low- water maps of the groundwater table in the central Amazon by satellite altimetry

Journal

GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 41, Issue 6, Pages 1981-1987

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2013GL059134

Keywords

groundwater; Amazon; radar altimetry

Funding

  1. project CARBAMA (CARBon biogeochemistry and atmospheric exchanges in the AMAzon river system)
  2. ANR (National Research Agency)
  3. project MHYZPA (Modelisation de l'HYdrologie des zones d'inondation de la Plaine Centrale Amazonienne)
  4. EC2CO (INSU/CNRS)
  5. bilateral CNPq (Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cientifico e Tecnologico, Brazil)
  6. IRD (Institut de Recherche pour le Developpement, France)

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Groundwater plays a fundamental role in rainforest environments, as it is connected with rivers, lakes, and wetlands, and helps to support wildlife habitat during dry periods. Groundwater reservoirs are however excessively difficult to monitor, especially in large and remote areas. Using concepts from groundwater-surface water interactions and ENVISAT altimetry data, we evaluated the topography of the groundwater table during low-water periods in the alluvial plain of the central Amazon. The water levels are monitored using an unprecedented coverage of 491 altimetric stations over surface waters in the central Amazon. The groundwater table maps interpolated at spatial resolutions ranging from 50 to 100km are consistent with groundwater wells data. They provide evidence of significant spatiotemporal organization at regional scale: heterogeneous flow from the hillslope toward the main rivers is observed, as well as strong memory effects and contrasted hydrological behaviors between the North and the South of the Amazon.

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