CSIRO Publishing logo   blank image
You are here: Books   
 
blank image Search
 
blank image blank image
blank image
 
  Advanced Search
   
Books Home
New Releases
Forthcoming Releases
On Sale
Series
Publishing Partners
How to Order
For Authors
eBooks

blue arrow e-Alerts
blank image
Subscribe to our Email Alert or RSS feeds RSS

red arrow Connect with us
blank image
facebook   youtube

red arrow Stocktake Sale
blank image
View products currently available at reduced prices.

Using Groundwater Responses to Infer Recharge - Part 5

Enlarge Cover
 

Using Groundwater Responses to Infer Recharge - Part 5

Basics of Recharge and Discharge Series 5

D Armstrong   CSIRO Land and Water
K Narayan  

Illustrations
20 pages
Publisher: CSIRO PUBLISHING


Our eBooks are available from eBooks.com and other retailers

 

 Analytical methods of assessing the response of groundwater levels to a range of factors, including elastic (barometric and tidal) influences in confined aquifers and recharge to unconfined aquifers due to infiltration of rain and other surface water, are presented. Responses in a confined aquifer to distant recharge events and the associated time lag is discussed. Also covered are responses to changes in storage volume resulting from direct recharge at the outcrop of an unconfined aquifer system both seasonally and on a single recharge event basis. Worked examples and case histories are used to illustrate methods of estimating the amount of recharge at different sites within a catchment. The application of vertical cross-sectional flow nets to the estimation of recharge is presented in the context of recharge/discharge profiles. 

 
  • Introduction
  • Groundwater Level Responses in Piezometres
  • Estimation of Recharge from Piezometric Responses from Different Parts of Catchments
  • Flow Nets and Recharge-Discharge Profiles
  • References
 

Related Titles
 Ecology of Australian Freshwater Fishes    Australasian Nature Photography    Environmental Flows   A Guide to Australia's Spiny Freshwater Crayfish    Estuary Plants and What's Happening to them in South-East Australia   The Value of Water in a Drying Climate   The State of the World's Land and Water Resources for Food and Agriculture  

  
 


 
return to top of pageTop  email this page Email this page
 
Legal & Privacy | Contact Us | Help

CSIRO

© CSIRO 1996-2013