dc.description.abstract |
The growth of human population often corresponds with change in land use, including
expansion of urban areas, which necessitates increasing the available amount of drinking
water. As the surface water sources are more amenable to pollution, it has become necessary
to use groundwater at an increasing rate. Groundwater is normally abundant in the alluvial
region where the urban areas are often located. Such areas face a greater risk of pollution of
groundwater due to several factors. Keeping these aspects in view, groundwater vulnerability
studies have been carried out in a selected alluvial area of northern India. The study area is
situated in the upper part of the Ganga-Yamuna interfluve, and is considered to be the major
recharge zone for the deep aquifers of the region. The aim of this study is to identify the
groundwater vulnerability in the area so that the groundwater can be protected from pollution.
In present work, it was envisaged to review the methods currently available for
assessment of the groundwater vulnerability and to develop an appropriate method suitable
for the alluvial aquifers of the Ganga-Yamuna interfluve area. Attempts were also to develop
a multipurpose database in GIS environment, and to validate the developed method by
comparing its findings against the observed water quality characteristics ofthe region.
The study area is the northern part of the vast Indo - Gangetic Plain in India and lies
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between latitudes 29 33 51 to 30 19 10 Nand longitudes 77 06 20 to 78 20 15 Ewith
a total geographical area ofapproximately 4900 km2. Administratively, the study area covers
the districts of Hardwar in Uttaranchal and Saharanpur in Uttar Pradesh, and has apopulation
of about 4.3 million as per Census of 2001. The Ganga River and its tributary, the Yamuna,
are the two major rivers in the region. These two rivers are perennial in nature and form the
eastern and western boundaries of the study area. Other small intermittent streams like
Ratmau River, Solani, and Banganga - the tributaries of the Ganga, and Hindon River, a
tributary of the Yamuna, drain the area. Anetwork of canals exists in the study area for
meeting the irrigation needs; the notable being the Upper Ganga canal and Eastern Yamuna
canal along with their distributaries and branches. The climate of the area is humid and
subtropical. The rains occur mainly during July to middle of September with annual average
rainfall of about 100 cm.
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LISS-III data of India Remote Sensing (IRS) satellite was used to prepare the land use
map of the study area. On the basis of these data, the whole area was classified into three land
use classes, i.e. urban, rural (including agriculture), and forest. The field monitoring was
carried out during January 2002 to December 2003, through extensive field surveys covering
entire study area. Groundwater samples (136 no.) were collected from various sites well
distributed among various land use types in the study area and. Also, soil samples (48 no.)
were collected from different sites covering all the land use categories. Geological and hydrogeological
settings were examined for the study area. The depth to groundwater was
monitored from the observation wells (119 no.). Besides, historic data available for past 10
years was also taken from Uttar Pradesh Groundwater Department, Roorkee. Groundwater
recharge was estimated by Tritium tagging method at five locations during the period from
Jun 2002 to Nov 2002. These, alongwith earlier data available at National Institute of
Hydrology, Roorkee were used.
A Digital Elevation Model (DEM) was prepared by digitization of bench mark and
topographic points from relevant maps. The DEM was in turn, used for the construction of
the slope map. The depth to groundwater map of the study area was generated from the
observed data. The soil samples were analyzed to ascertain the soil texture and to prepare the
soil map. This map showed that the most of the northern part, paleochannels and active
floodplains of rivers have soils of sandy loam texture whereas the remaining part of the study
area is covered by soils having silty loam. Considering the soil texture as an appropriate
source factor of variation, the average recharge percentage was calculated as 6.3 % in silty
loam soils and 15.5 % in sandy loam soils. The software RockWorks99 was used to prepare
the geological fence diagram. Hydraulic conductivity map was prepared using Hydraulic
conductivity data in GIS environment. The flow direction map, showed that the ground water
flows from the northern and northeast part (the hilly area) to southern and southwestern part
and follows the general topography of the study area. Hindon River and Solani River are fed
by groundwater in the southern part. The hydraulic conductivity in the study area varies
between 10 m/day and 48 m/day. The south-western part shows higher values in general,
whereas the north-western part shows lower values.
The quality of the soils in the study area was analyzed. The results exhibit that in general
the urban soil has the highest values of all the physicochemical parameters followed by the
rural and forest soils indicating an important role of urban activities
The groundwater samples were analyzed for various physicochemical parameters like pH,
EC, TDS and major ions (Ca2+, Mg2+, Na+, K+, HC03", CI", S042", C032", F), nutrients (N03\
VI
P04 "), total organic carbon (TOC) and heavy metals (Cd, Fe, Mn, Ni, Zn, Pb, Cr, Cu). In
general, the groundwater quality in the study area does not indicate much variation between
postmonsoon and premonsoon periods. Further, all major ions, except N03"and K+. show an
increasing trend from north to south and southwest. The groundwater is generally alkaline in
nature with pH ranging from 7.01 to 8.90. The TDS values range between 117 to 1002 mg/1.
HC03" is the dominant major anion followed by C1>S042> N03">F">P04 3" whereas Ca2+ is
the major cation followed by Na+>Mg2+>K+. The heavy metal Zn is dominant followed by
Mn>Fe>Pb>Cd.
The calcium-bicarbonate facies are dominant in the groundwater of the study area.
indicating that a substantial part ofground water is derived as recharge from the Bhabar zone
in the north. Generally, the concentration of chemical parameters, except N03" and S042\
follow a decreasing trend for urban > rural > forest land use categories, whereas N03" and
S04 "follow the decreasing trend for forest >urban >rural land use. Besides, a few samples
show some parameters like total alkalinity (TA), nitrate, TDS, and Calcium having higher
ranges than acceptable limits ofIndian standard (BIS: 10500) for drinking water. Among the
heavy metals, tolerance limits of cadmium, manganese, lead and iron are violated in several
samples.
On the basis ofdemonstrated violation ofthe acceptable limits, the quality parameters like
TDS, Ca2+, Total Alkalinity (TA), N03\ Cd, Mn, Pb, and Fe have been selected for
computation of an Index of Aquifer Water Quality (MIAWQ), utilizing the framework as
proposed by Melloul and Collin (1998). The index was modified for the present case in the
sense that the weights to these eight parameters were, however, assigned as per their
analytical hierarchy in the human health (effecting) significance and not in a subjective
manner (as attempted in the original work of Melloul and Collin). The values ofMIAWQ
(modified index) show an increase from north, north-east to south and south-western parts of
the study area.
The groundwater vulnerability mapping was carried out using two approaches viz.
standard DRASTIC method and a modified DRASTIC-MOD method the study area. The
DRASTIC parameters were evaluated in GIS environment as seven restart-map layers. The
rating percentages were subsequently added to obtain the total cell rating. The DRASTIC
index in the study area ranges from 122 to 183. The east and south-west corners ofthe study
area and the paleochannels in the southern part show higher vulnerability index values.
While applying the DRASTIC method on the present study area for assessment of
vulnerability, following limitations were noticed:
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> The proposed rating scale for the parameter "Impact of vadose zone" did not
adequately address the implicit variability among the geological constituents of the
vadose zone viz. sand gravel, silt and clay, andthe resulting complexity.
> The "Hydraulic conductivity" values observed in study area mostly surpassed the
highest limit/range of the rating scale rendering observed spatial variability
meaningless with respect to the aquifer vulnerability.
> Observing definitive signals about the influence of land use (urban > rural and
agricultural > forest) on the soil and groundwater quality, the parameter "land use "
appeared to also have on important bearing the status of aquifer vulnerability
alongwith other parameters proposed earlier.
Due modifications were incorporated in the original DRASTIC model in view of the
above and the modified (DRASTIC-MOD) index map was sub-divided into four classes, (i)
100 - 119 with low risk in the north part of the study area (forest area), (ii) 120 - 159 with
moderate risk in the Bhabar zone with deep depth to groundwater and forest area, (iii) 160 -
199 with high risk in most parts of the study area, these values resulting mainly from
cumulative effects of rural and agricultural land use, low to moderate depth to groundwater
and high recharge coefficient, (iiiv) Indices of 200 and above with very high vulnerability in
some parts of the study area, reflecting the shallow depth to groundwater, high recharge and
high urbanization related activities. DRASTIC-MOD indicates high vulnerability in the
southern parts of the study area indicating higher risk of groundwater pollution.
In order to validate the projected risk of vulnerability with actual groundwater quality
statues in the region, DRASTIC and DRASTIC-MOD maps were correlated with modified
Index for Aquifer Water Quality (MIAWQ). The MIAWQ showed high significant
correlation with DRASTIC-MOD map.
The differences observed in the spatial distribution of vulnerability estimates obtained
from both the methods (DRASTIC and DRASTIC-MOD) indicate that in the areas with
existing well defined land use practices, vulnerability estimation should necessarily include
"land use" as a parameter. Further, in view of a good correlation between the DRASTICMOD
and MIAWQ maps, it may be inferred that the "risk of vulnerability" corresponds quite
well with the existing water quality scenario in the study area, a finding not commonly
reported by researchers earlier. This also highlights the need of initiating corrective measures
in many parts of the study area as well as to establish a suitable monitoring protocoal to
detect adverse quality trends in the future. |
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