Hostname: page-component-6766d58669-fx4k7 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2026-05-20T07:13:16.902Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Hydrochemical coupling of a glacial borehole–aquifer system

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 September 2017

Greg A. Oldenborger
Affiliation:
Department of Earth and Ocean Sciences, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia V6T 1Z4, Canada E-mail: greg@cgiss.boisestate.edu
Garry K. C. Clarke
Affiliation:
Department of Earth and Ocean Sciences, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia V6T 1Z4, Canada E-mail: greg@cgiss.boisestate.edu
Dave H. D. Hildes
Affiliation:
Department of Earth and Ocean Sciences, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia V6T 1Z4, Canada E-mail: greg@cgiss.boisestate.edu
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Measurements of the electrical conductivity of subglacial water provide a useful complement to measurements of pressure and turbidity. In the summer season, fluctuations of conductivity can be attributed to changes in water transport, water provenance and subglacial residence time. These explanations are unlikely to apply during the winter season because surface melt sources are not active and the subglacial water system is predominantly unconnected. Thus, fluctuations in water conductivity during the winter months seem paradoxical. To introduce a quantitative basis for comprehending such phenomena, we develop an interpretative model of the hydrochemical interaction between a water-filled borehole and a subglacial aquifer. The electrical conductivity of water near the borehole–aquifer contact is affected not only by diffusion but also by advective transport of solute between the two reservoirs in response to pressure forcing of the system. Using records of ice strain, water pressure and electrical conductivity from unconnected boreholes in Trapridge Glacier, we demonstrate that changes in borehole geometry caused by ice-strain events provide a plausible mechanism for at least some of the observed fluctuations of electrical conductivity. Conductivity records provide information regarding advective coupling of the borehole–aquifer system that is not available from pressure records alone.

Information

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International Glaciological Society 2002
Figure 0

Fig. 1 Postulated response to impulse pressurization. (a) Compressional strain event. Sketch (i) depicts a conductivity sensor (C) placed in an unconnected borehole. Shading is used to indicate the upward-decreasing concentration of solute in the hole. Sketch (ii) illustrates how compression of the borehole would drive fluid transport from the borehole to a subglacial aquifer and modify the concentration profile ofsolute in the borehole. Sketch (iii) illustrates how compression of the subglacial aquifer might drive the transport of solute-concentrated water from the aquifer into the borehole. (b) Uniaxial strain rate corresponding to unrecovered compression of the borehole. (c) Conductivity time series as measured by sensor C for two different cases. Flushing of mineralized water from higher in the borehole as in (a-ii) should lead to decreased conductivity detected by the sensor (solid line). Fluid flow from the aquifer as in (a-iii) should lead to increased conductivity at the sensor (dashed line). Local conductivity maxima indicate times when the strengths of advective and diffusive transport are balanced.

Figure 1

Fig. 2 Model geometry. The borehole is cylindrical with cross-sectional area A(t) and water-column height L(t). The aquifer is tabular and cylindrically symmetric with thickness δaq. The radius R0 of the interface is assumed constant with time.

Figure 2

Table 1 Constant simulation parameters

Figure 3

Fig. 3 Subglacial electrical-conductivity and water-pressure measurements for Trapridge Glacier during late summer 1994 and winter 1994/95. (a) Electrical conductivity recordfor sensor 94C08. (b) Water-pressure record for sensor 94P04 (in units ofpressure head). Day 225 corresponds to 23 August 1994.

Figure 4

Fig. 4 Simulated response of electrical conductivity, interface pressure and water velocity in response to a simplified seasonal strain event. (a) Electrical conductivity at 0.0, 0.1 and 0.5 m height within the borehole (0.10 m corresponds to the sensor height for the data presented in Figure 3). Initially, advection is the dominant transport process as unmineralized water from near the glacier surface replaces mineralized water near the glacier bed. After approximately 120 days, diffusion overtakes advection as the dominant transport process. (b) Interface pressure (in units of pressure head). (c) Interface water veloci y. (d) Assumed strain-rate forcing , corresponding to unrecovered uniaxial compression of the borehole.

Figure 5

Table 2 Model parameters for case-study 1

Figure 6

Fig. 5 Subglacial electrical conductivity and waterpressure measurements for Trapridge Glacier during winter 1993/94. (a) Electrical conductivity record for sensor 92C15. (b) Water-pressure record for sensor 93P07 (in units of pressure head). Day 300 corresponds to 29 October 1993.

Figure 7

Fig. 6 Simulated response of electrical conductivity, interface pressure and interface water velocity for a borehole in contact with a low-permeability aquifer. (a) Electrical conductivity at 0.0 and 0.1 m height within the borehole. Zero time corresponds to day number 225 (Fig. 7). (b) Interface pressure (in units of pressure head). (c) Interface water velocity. (d) Assumed strain-rateforcing , corresponding to unrecovered uniaxial expansion of the borehole.

Figure 8

Table 3 Model parameters for case-study 2

Figure 9

Fig. 7 Subglacial electrical-conductivity and pressure measurements for Trapridge Glacier during late summer and early winter 1994. (a) Electrical conductivity record for sensor 92C09. (b) Water-pressure record for sensor 93DP03 (in units of pressure head). (c) Vertical strain record for sensor 92VS04. Day 220 corresponds to 8 August 1994.

Figure 10

Fig. 8 Simulated response of electrical conductivity, interface pressure and water velocity in response to a simplified impulse strain event. (a) Electrical conductivity at 0.0, 0.15 and 1.0 m height within the borehole. Zero time corresponds to day number 225 (Fig. 7). (b) Interface pressure (in units ofpressure head). (c) Interface water velocity. (d) Assumed strain-rate forcing , corresponding to unrecovered uniaxial compression of the borehole.

Figure 11

Table 4 Model parameters for case-study 3

Figure 12

Fig. 9 A complicated event that cannot be simply explained using our interpretation model. (a) Englacial vertical strain ( sensor 97VS03) and subglacial water-pressure head (sensor 97P32) observed in summer 1998. (b) Subglacial water conductivity measurements for a trio array of conductivity sensors (from the bottom upward these are, respectively, 97C15, 97C16 and 97C17).