Abstract. Groundwater plays a significant role in glacial hydrology and can buffer
changes to the timing and magnitude of flows in meltwater rivers. However,
proglacial aquifer characteristics or groundwater dynamics in glacial
catchments are rarely studied directly. We provide direct evidence of
proglacial groundwater storage, and quantify multi-year
groundwater–meltwater dynamics, through detailed aquifer characterisation
and intensive high-resolution monitoring of the proglacial system of a
rapidly retreating glacier, Virkisjökull, in south-eastern Iceland. Proglacial
unconsolidated glaciofluvial sediments comprise a highly permeable aquifer
(25–40 m d−1) in which groundwater flow in the shallowest 20–40 m
of the aquifer is equivalent to 4.5 % (2.6 %–5.8 %) of mean river flow,
and 9.7 % (5.8 %–12.3 %) of winter flow. Estimated annual groundwater
flow through the entire aquifer thickness is 10 % (4 %–22 %) the
magnitude of annual river flow. Groundwater in the aquifer is actively
recharged by glacier meltwater and local precipitation, both rainfall and
snowmelt, and strongly influenced by individual precipitation events. Local
precipitation represents the highest proportion of recharge across the
aquifer. However, significant glacial meltwater influence on groundwater
within the aquifer occurs in a 50–500 m river zone within which there are
complex groundwater–river exchanges. Stable isotopes, groundwater dynamics
and temperature data demonstrate active recharge from river losses,
especially in the summer melt season, with more than 25 % and often
>50 % of groundwater in the near-river aquifer zone sourced
from glacier meltwater. Proglacial aquifers such as these are common
globally, and future changes in glacier coverage and precipitation are
likely to increase the significance of groundwater storage within them. The
scale of proglacial groundwater flow and storage has important implications
for measuring meltwater flux, for predicting future river flows, and for
providing strategic water supplies in de-glaciating catchments.
The Sustainable Development Goals have set an agenda for transformational change in water access, aiming for secure household connections globally. Despite this goal, communal groundwater supplies are likely to remain the main source of improved water supplies for many rural areas in Africa and South Asia for decades to come. Understanding the poor functionality of existing communal supplies remains, therefore, a priority. A critical first step is to establish a sector-wide definition of borehole supply functionality and a standard method of its assessment.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.