| dc.description.abstract |
The ParaÃba and Pernambuco basins are part of the Northeast Brazilian rift system, which contains a series of
Cretaceous terrestrial to marine sediments covered by Neogene-Quaternary deposits. Their main aquifers (i.e.
Barreiras, Beberibe, Cabo, Quaternary and, Fractured) constitute multi-layered aquifer systems and are the main
strategical source of drinking water for the Recife Metropolitan Region. In this research, 323 physical-chemical
samples along with 25 isotopic groundwater analyses were used to characterize the main hydrochemical processes
controlling groundwater’s chemistry and to identify recharge sources. Graphical, ionic ratios and multivariate
statistical methods were used to achieve these goals. The correlation matrix was used to evaluate
significant associations between 11 geochemical parameters. Principal Component Analysis was employed and a
two-factor model is suggested explaining 72.54% of the total variation within the dataset. PC1 is the major
contributor to groundwater mineralization and is assigned to ‘natural’ processes (e.g. rock weathering, ion exchange,
etc.), and PC2 is related to ‘anthropogenic’ processes (e.g. nitrate contamination). Hierarchical cluster
analysis was employed and partitioned the water samples into 28 distinct hydrochemical water clusters (B1–B4,
Barreiras; BE1–BE6, Beberibe; C1–C6, Cabo; Q1–Q7, Quaternary; and F1–F5, Fractured). The majority of the cluster
samples have Na+–Cl to Na+–HCO3 water type, including the low salinity groundwater, which in a first
approximation could be spatially tied to the recharge zones, and intermediate ones probably related to transition
zones. Na+–Cl to mixed–Cl water type is typical for high salinity groundwater that more probably results from
mixing with infiltrating highly mineralized water. The groundwaters’ major ion compositions are primarily
controlled by the following interactions: (1) mixing of Pleistocene marine transgression with meteoric Holocene
infiltrating water, besides atmospheric deposition; (2) water–rock interactions from silicate rock-forming minerals;
(3) ion-exchange reactions; and (4) input from animal/human wastewater. The analyzed groundwater
samples showed isotopic signature ranging from 1.98 to +0.36‰ and 2.0 to +7.0‰ for δ18O and δ2H
respectively, which is similar to precipitation. These isotopic depleted signatures suggest that most of the deep
groundwater was likely recharged from colder epochs and/or from a selection of winter infiltrating precipitation
through time. |
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