Login / Signup

Evolution of groundwater system in the Pearl River Delta and its adjacent shelf since the late Pleistocene.

Chong ShengJiu Jimmy JiaoJinpeng ZhangYantao YaoXin LuoShengchao YuYugen NiShidong WangRong MaoTao YangLinsen Zhan
Published in: Science advances (2024)
Our extensive field studies demonstrate that saline groundwater inland and freshened groundwater offshore coexist in the same aquifer system in the Pearl River delta and its adjacent shelf. This counterintuitive phenomenon challenges the commonly held assumption that onshore groundwater is typically fresh, while offshore groundwater is saline. To address this knowledge gap, we conduct a series of sophisticated paleo-hydrogeological models to explore the formation mechanism and evolution process of the groundwater system in the inland-shelf systems. Our findings indicate that shelf freshened groundwater has formed during the lowstands since late Pleistocene, while onshore saline groundwater is generated by paleo-seawater intrusion during the Holocene transgression. This reveals that terrestrial and offshore groundwater systems have undergone alternating changes on a geological timescale. The groundwater system exhibits hysteresis responding to paleoclimate changes, with a lag of 7 to 8 thousand years, suggesting that paleoclimatic forcings exert a significantly residual influence on the present-day groundwater system.
Keyphrases
  • health risk
  • drinking water
  • human health
  • water quality
  • heavy metals
  • health risk assessment
  • risk assessment
  • healthcare
  • climate change
  • mass spectrometry
  • high resolution
  • liquid chromatography