Hydrogeology of Wales: Quaternary aquifers - Whiteford Sands: Difference between revisions

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| Groundwater discharge along the foreshore beneath Whiteford Burrows on the Gower Peninsula. [https://bgsintranet/asset-bank/action/viewFullSizedImage?id=390752&size=1000 P802434.]
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Whiteford Sands is a blown sand spit over glacial till ('''Plate P802434'''). The fore-dunes give way to beach sands and the back of the dunes to the east, to clays and silts of tidal flat deposits. The sand rests on till deposited beneath a Quaternary ice sheet. Steep northerly dipping Carboniferous Limestone strata abut the sand at the landward (southern) edge, although the Millstone Grit succession underlies the majority of the burrows area. It is unlikely that groundwater in the Carboniferous Limestone can ingress the sands due to the steep bedding of the limestone, in which dilated bedding plains will tend to drain to the base of the upstanding outcrop.
Whiteford Sands is a blown sand spit over glacial till ('''Plate P802434'''). The fore-dunes give way to beach sands and the back of the dunes to the east, to clays and silts of tidal flat deposits. The sand rests on till deposited beneath a Quaternary ice sheet. Steep northerly dipping Carboniferous Limestone strata abut the sand at the landward (southern) edge, although the Millstone Grit succession underlies the majority of the burrows area. It is unlikely that groundwater in the Carboniferous Limestone can ingress the sands due to the steep bedding of the limestone, in which dilated bedding plains will tend to drain to the base of the upstanding outcrop.


The sand acts as a small unconfined aquifer perched over impermeable till. Water contained in the sand derives solely from direct rainfall recharge. The groundwater stored in the sands discharges naturally to the foreshore while a small amount discharges to the salt marshes behind the dunes. There are no external contributions to the water balance although standing water on the shore side of the burrows does enhance evaporative losses from this area.
The sand acts as a small unconfined aquifer perched over impermeable till. Water contained in the sand derives solely from direct rainfall recharge. The groundwater stored in the sands discharges naturally to the foreshore while a small amount discharges to the salt marshes behind the dunes. There are no external contributions to the water balance although standing water on the shore side of the burrows does enhance evaporative losses from this area.


The groundwater flow regime at Whiteford comprises a groundwater dome created by direct rainfall recharge with discharge to the foreshore. However, it has been heavily impacted by change when storm ingress and erosion of the foreshore took place in 1996 increasing the hydraulic gradient away from the dune front with a corresponding increase in discharge from the dunes ''(Stratford et al. 2009)''. The consequent lowering of the water table virtually overnight is only now slowly beginning to recover ('''FIGURE 7.6''').
The groundwater flow regime at Whiteford comprises a groundwater dome created by direct rainfall recharge with discharge to the foreshore. However, it has been heavily impacted by change when storm ingress and erosion of the foreshore took place in 1996 increasing the hydraulic gradient away from the dune front with a corresponding increase in discharge from the dunes ''(Stratford et al. 2009)''. The consequent lowering of the water table virtually overnight is only now slowly beginning to recover ('''FIGURE 7.6''').

Revision as of 15:20, 21 August 2013

File:DirectLinkImage
Groundwater discharge along the foreshore beneath Whiteford Burrows on the Gower Peninsula. P802434.

Whiteford Sands is a blown sand spit over glacial till (Plate P802434). The fore-dunes give way to beach sands and the back of the dunes to the east, to clays and silts of tidal flat deposits. The sand rests on till deposited beneath a Quaternary ice sheet. Steep northerly dipping Carboniferous Limestone strata abut the sand at the landward (southern) edge, although the Millstone Grit succession underlies the majority of the burrows area. It is unlikely that groundwater in the Carboniferous Limestone can ingress the sands due to the steep bedding of the limestone, in which dilated bedding plains will tend to drain to the base of the upstanding outcrop.


The sand acts as a small unconfined aquifer perched over impermeable till. Water contained in the sand derives solely from direct rainfall recharge. The groundwater stored in the sands discharges naturally to the foreshore while a small amount discharges to the salt marshes behind the dunes. There are no external contributions to the water balance although standing water on the shore side of the burrows does enhance evaporative losses from this area.


The groundwater flow regime at Whiteford comprises a groundwater dome created by direct rainfall recharge with discharge to the foreshore. However, it has been heavily impacted by change when storm ingress and erosion of the foreshore took place in 1996 increasing the hydraulic gradient away from the dune front with a corresponding increase in discharge from the dunes (Stratford et al. 2009). The consequent lowering of the water table virtually overnight is only now slowly beginning to recover (FIGURE 7.6).