GROUNDWATER CHEMISTRY IN THE SELLAFIELD AREA - A PRELIMINARY INTERPRETATION

Citation
Ah. Bath et al., GROUNDWATER CHEMISTRY IN THE SELLAFIELD AREA - A PRELIMINARY INTERPRETATION, Quarterly Journal of Engineering Geology, 29, 1996, pp. 39-57
Citations number
37
Categorie Soggetti
Engineering, Civil","Geosciences, Interdisciplinary
ISSN journal
04812085
Volume
29
Year of publication
1996
Supplement
1
Pages
39 - 57
Database
ISI
SICI code
0481-2085(1996)29:<39:GCITSA>2.0.ZU;2-Z
Abstract
Hydrochemical investigations form an important part of the Nirex Site Characterization Programme at Sellafield. They support the development of a conceptual hydrogeological model of the area as it is now, are t he main basis for reconstructing the palaeohydrogeological evolution o f the area over the recent geological past (which will assist predicti ons of future evolution) and allow characterization of the baseline hy drochemical conditions in the potential repository rock volume. The de ep hydrochemistry of the area of interest is dominated by its location on the margin of the East Irish Sea Basin. To the west of the potenti al repository zone, the influence of basinal brines has been a feature of the deep sedimentary rocks and the Borrowdale Volcanic Group (BVG) basement for a considerable period of geological time. The brines cur rently present are inferred to be the result of partial dissolution of Permo-Triassic halite by ancient (probably pre-Pleistocene) meteoric recharge. Within the BVG of the potential repository zone itself, stab le isotopic data and estimates of recharge temperature (based on noble gas data) indicate a predominance of old meteoric recharge (probably Pleistocene). These groundwaters are moderately saline (Cl concentrati on about 3/4 that of seawater) and of NaCl type. Br/Cl ratios suggest that a significant component of this salinity is derived from a putati ve saline groundwater within the Lake District basement further to the east. The BVG within the potential repository zone is overlain by a P ermo-Triassic sedimentary sequence containing fresh groundwaters of Ca -HCO3 type, which are separated from the underlying saline groundwater s by a fairly sharp salinity transition near the base of the sedimenta ry formations and locally within the topmost part of the BVG.