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Response of the water level in a well to Earth tides and atmospheric loading under unconfined conditions
Author(s) -
Rojstaczer Stuart,
Riley Francis S.
Publication year - 1990
Publication title -
water resources research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.863
H-Index - 217
eISSN - 1944-7973
pISSN - 0043-1397
DOI - 10.1029/wr026i008p01803
Subject(s) - aquifer , water table , phreatic , dimensionless quantity , geology , earth (classical element) , atmospheric tide , atmospheric pressure , groundwater , atmospheric sciences , environmental science , mechanics , geotechnical engineering , geophysics , physics , mathematical physics , ionosphere , oceanography , thermosphere
The response of the water level in a well to Earth tides and atmospheric loading under unconfined conditions can be explained if the water level is controlled by the aquifer response averaged over the saturated depth of the well. Because vertical averaging tends to diminish the influence of the water table, the response is qualitatively similar to the response of a well under partially confined conditions. When the influence of well bore storage can be ignored, the response to Earth tides is strongly governed by a dimensionless aquifer frequency Q ′ u . The response to atmospheric loading is strongly governed by two dimensionless vertical fluid flow parameters: a dimensionless unsaturated zone frequency, R , and a dimensionless aquifer frequency Q u . The differences between Q ′ u and Q u are generally small for aquifers which are highly sensitive to Earth tides. When Q ′ u and Q u are large, the response of the well to Earth tides and atmospheric loading approaches the static response of the aquifer under confined conditions. At small values of Q ′ u and Q u , well response to Earth tides and atmospheric loading is strongly influenced by water table drainage. When R is large relative to Q u , the response to atmospheric loading is strongly influenced by attenuation and phase shift of the pneumatic pressure signal in the unsaturated zone. The presence of partial penetration retards phase advance in well response to Earth tides and atmospheric loading. When the theoretical response of a phreatic well to Earth tides and atmospheric loading is fit to the well response inferred from cross‐spectral estimation, it is possible to obtain estimates of the pneumatic diffusivity of the unsaturated zone and the vertical hydraulic conductivity of the aquifer.