Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2122/15015
Authors: Cianflone, Giuseppe* 
Vespasiano, Giovanni* 
De Rosa, Rosanna* 
Dominici, Rocco* 
Apollaro, Carmine* 
Vaselli, Orlando* 
Pizzino, Luca* 
Tolomei, Cristiano* 
Capecchiacci, Francesco* 
Polemio, Maurizio* 
Title: Hydrostratigraphic Framework and Physicochemical Status of Groundwater in the Gioia Tauro Coastal Plain (Calabria—Southern Italy)
Journal: Water 
Series/Report no.: /13 (2021)
Publisher: MDPI
Issue Date: Nov-2021
DOI: 10.3390/w13223279
Keywords: Gioia Tauro Plain; groundwater; hydrostratigraphic framework; seawater intrusion; physicochemical status; warm waters
Subject ClassificationHydrostratigraphic Framework and Physicochemical Status of Groundwater in the Gioia Tauro Coastal Plain (Calabria—Southern Italy)
Abstract: In this study, we analysed the Gioia Tauro Plain (Tyrrhenian coast, southern Italy) in terms of hydrostratigraphy and the physicochemical status of groundwater. We investigated the hydrostratigraphic framework of the area identifying a deep aquifer (made by late Miocene succession), an aquitard (consisting of Pliocene clayey and silty deposits) and a shallow aquifer (including Late Pleistocene and Holocene marine and alluvial sediments) using subsoil data (boreholes and geophysics). Our reconstruction showed that the structural geology controls the spatial pattern of the aquitard top and the shallow aquifer thickness. Furthermore, we evaluated the hydraulic conductivity for the shallow aquifer using an empirical method, calibrated by slug tests, obtaining values ranging from 10􀀀4 to 10􀀀5 m/s with a maximum of 10􀀀3 m/s located close to inland dune fields. The piezometric level of the shallow aquifer recorded a significant drop between the 1970s and 2021 (􀀀35 m as the worst value). It is the effect of climate and soil use changes, the latter being the increased water demand for kiwi cultivation. Despite the overexploitation of the shallow aquifer, shallow groundwater is fresh (736 S/cm as mean electrical conductivity) except for a narrow coastal area where the electrical conductivity is more than 1500 S/cm, which can be due to the seawater intrusion. What was more complex was the physicochemical status of the deep aquifer characterised by high temperature (up to 25.8 C) and electrical conductivity up to 10,520 S/cm along the northern and southern plain boundaries marked by tectonic structures. This issue suggested the dominant role of the local fault system that is likely affecting the deep groundwater flow and its chemical evolution.
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