On the origins of hypersaline groundwater in the Nile Delta aquifer

Publication date

2018-05

Authors

Engelen, J vanISNI 0000000506294668
Oude Essink, Gualbert H.P.ORCID 0000-0003-0931-6944ISNI 0000000385630206
Kooi, Henk
Bierkens, Marc F.P.ORCID 0000-0002-7411-6562ISNI 0000000109834798

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Advisors

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Document Type

Article
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cc_by

Abstract

The Nile Delta is essential to Egypt's agro- and socio-economy. Although surface water is the traditional source for Egypt's irrigation, the shallow fresh groundwater resources underlying the delta are increasingly burdened by groundwater pumping, which increases interest in the status of the groundwater resources. Groundwater up to three times more saline than sea water was found at 600 m depth. The occurrence of this hypersaline groundwater raises doubts on the often-made assumption in the literature that seawater is the only source of salt in the Nile Delta aquifer and makes further investigation necessary. Knowledge on the origin of this hypersaline groundwater is key in assessing the possibility of deep fresh groundwater pockets. In this paper we conducted computational analyses to assess possible origins using both analytical solutions and numerical models. It is concluded that the hypersaline groundwater can either originate from Quaternary free convection systems, or from compaction-induced upward salt transport of hypersaline groundwater that formed during the Messinian salinity crisis. Our results also indicate that with groundwater dating it is possible to discriminate between these two hypotheses. Furthermore, it is deduced that the hydrological connection between aquifer and sea is crucial to the hydrogeological functioning of the Nile Delta Aquifer.

Keywords

Nile, Delta, Hydrogeology, Hypersaline, Brine, Groundwater, Water Science and Technology

Citation

van Engelen, J, Oude Essink, G H P, Kooi, H & Bierkens, M F P 2018, 'On the origins of hypersaline groundwater in the Nile Delta aquifer', Journal of Hydrology, vol. 560, pp. 301-317. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhydrol.2018.03.029