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A Reassessment of Ground Water Flow Conditions and Specific Yield at Borden and Cape Cod
Author(s) -
Grimestad Garry
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
groundwater
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.84
H-Index - 94
eISSN - 1745-6584
pISSN - 0017-467X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1745-6584.2002.tb02487.x
Subject(s) - drawdown (hydrology) , aquifer , yield (engineering) , aquifer test , range (aeronautics) , drainage , hydrology (agriculture) , environmental science , geology , flow (mathematics) , aquifer properties , soil science , groundwater , geotechnical engineering , mechanics , groundwater recharge , engineering , materials science , ecology , physics , aerospace engineering , metallurgy , biology
Recent widely accepted findings respecting the origin and nature of specific yield in unconfined aquifers rely heavily on water level changes observed during two pumping tests, one conducted at Borden, Ontario, Canada, and the other at Cape Cod, Massachusetts. The drawdown patterns observed during those tests have been taken as proof that unconfined specific yield estimates obtained from long‐duration pumping tests should approach the laboratory‐estimated effective porosity of representative aquifer formation samples. However, both of the original test reports included direct or referential descriptions of potential supplemental sources of pumped water that would have introduced intractable complications and errors into straightforward interpretations of the drawdown observations if actually present. Searches for evidence of previously neglected sources were performed by screening the original drawdown observations from both locations for signs of diagnostic skewing that should be present only if some of the extracted water was derived from sources other than main aquifer storage. The data screening was performed using error‐guided computer assisted fitting techniques, capable of accurately sensing and simulating the effects of a wide range of non‐traditional and external sources. The drawdown curves from both tests proved to be inconsistent with traditional single‐source pumped aquifer models but consistent with site‐specific alternatives that included significant contributions of water from external sources. The corrected pumping responses shared several important features. Unsaturated drainage appears to have ceased effectively at both locations within the first day of pumping, and estimates of specific yield stabilized at levels considerably smaller than the corresponding laboratory‐measured or probable effective porosity. Separate sequential analyses of progressively later field observations gave stable and nearly constant specific yield estimates for each location, with no evidence from either test that more prolonged pumping would have induced substantially greater levels of unconfined specific yield.