Assessment of Spatial Variation of Groundwater Quality in a Mining Basin
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Date
2017-05-15
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Authors
Alexander, Augustina Clara
Ndambuki, Julius
Salim, Ramadhan
Manda, Alex
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Abstract
Assessment of groundwater quality is vital for the sustainable safe use of this inimitable
resource. However, describing the overall groundwater quality condition—particularly in a mining
basin—is more complicated due to the spatial variability of multiple contaminants and the wide range
of indicators found in these areas. This study applies a geographic information system (GIS)-based
groundwater quality index (GQI) to assess water quality in a mining basin. The study synthesized
nine different water quality parameters available—nitrate, sulphate, chloride, sodium, magnesium,
calcium, dissolved mineral solids, potassium, and floride (NO−, SO2−, Cl−, Na+, Mg2+, Ca2+, DMS, 34
K+ and F−)—from 90 boreholes across the basin by indexing them numerically relative to the World Health Organization standards. The study compared data from 2006 and 2011. The produced map indicated a lower GQI of 67 in 2011 compared to 72 in 2006. The maximum GQI of 84.4 calculated using only three parameters (Mg2+, K+ and F−) compared well with the GQI of 84.6 obtained using all nine parameters. A noticeable declining groundwater quality trend was observed in most parts of the basin, especially in the south-western and the northern parts of the basin. The temporal variation between the GQIs for 2006 and 2011 indicated variable groundwater quality (coefficient of variation = 15–30%) in areas around the mining field, and even more variability (coefficient of variation >30%) in the south-western and eastern parts of the basin.
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DOI
10.3390/su9050823