GROUNDWATER-FLOW BENEATH A HYPERSALINE POND, CLUETT KEY, FLORIDA BAY,FLORIDA

Citation
T. Juster et al., GROUNDWATER-FLOW BENEATH A HYPERSALINE POND, CLUETT KEY, FLORIDA BAY,FLORIDA, Journal of hydrology, 197(1-4), 1997, pp. 339-369
Citations number
65
Categorie Soggetti
Engineering, Civil","Water Resources","Geosciences, Interdisciplinary
Journal title
ISSN journal
00221694
Volume
197
Issue
1-4
Year of publication
1997
Pages
339 - 369
Database
ISI
SICI code
0022-1694(1997)197:1-4<339:GBAHPC>2.0.ZU;2-3
Abstract
Florida Bay carbonate mud islands are known to be sites of Holocene di agenesis, including dolomitization, and the hydrology is an essential component of this process. On Cluett Key, a typical mud island in west ern Florida Bay, groundwater salinities range to 145 parts per thousan d beneath a shallow ephemeral pond which occupies 70% of the island. A sharp hydrostratigraphic boundary separates low-permeability unconsol idated carbonate mud from underlying highly permeable Pleistocene lime stone. We report the results of a 2 year project aimed at determining the rates, patterns, and driving force of groundwater flow beneath the island. Water level measurements are used to demonstrate the presence of a large hydraulic head drive caused by the difference in elevation s of the pond and Florida Bay, and enhanced by the higher density of g roundwaters in the carbonate mud compared with groundwater in the lime stone. The hydraulic head drive is essentially vertical because Florid a Bay water levels are transmitted with little attenuation to the lime stone underlying the island. Distributions of groundwater density and pore pressures are consistent with vertical groundwater flow. Based on an estimated vertical hydraulic conductivity of approximately 5 x 10( -3) m day(-1), vertical interstitial velocities are on the order of 25 cm year(-1) with a residence time in the carbonate mud of approximate ly 15 years. This velocity is very similar to that calculated independ ently from tritium concentrations in pore waters. Both horizontal and vertical density gradients exist in the carbonate mud. These density v ariations induce circulations owing to vorticity and may lead to the f ormation of instability plumes (reflux), but dynamical scaling suggest s that these motions are much slower than those induced by the dominan t hydraulic drive. Buoyancy effects may, however, be dominant on other lower islands in Florida Bay where the hydraulic head drive is much s maller than on Cluett Key. Diffusion may blur sharp gradients in salt, Ca2+, or Mg2+, but is not an important vehicle for wholesale movement of these species through the island. Cluett Key shares some similarit ies with Holocene carbonate atoll islands: the two-layer hydrostratigr aphy, and transmission of tidal signals under the island. In contrast to atoll islands, however, groundwater flow on Cluett Key is governed by transmission of the mean sea level to the base of the Holocene. Bas al tidal fluctuations induce little mixing in the low-permeability Hol ocene sediments. In addition, the groundwater on Cluett Key is dominan tly oceanic, not meteoric, and is consequently denser than underlying groundwater. (C) 1997 Elsevier Science B.V.