Remote sensing, GIS, and analytic hierarchy process-based delineation and sustainable management of potential groundwater zones: a case study of Jhargram district, West Bengal, India.
Rajkumar GuriaManoranjan MishraSurajit DuttaRicharde Marques da SilvaCelso Augusto Guimarães SantosPublished in: Environmental monitoring and assessment (2023)
The present investigation delineates groundwater potential zones (GPZ) in the Jhargram district through an integrated approach employing analytical hierarchical process (AHP), remote sensing, and geographical information systems (GIS). Twelve parameters were utilized for GPZ analysis based on the Groundwater Potential Index, subsequent to multicollinearity testing. Classification of GPZ yielded five distinct categories: very poor, poor, moderate, good, and very good. Validation through receiver operating characteristics (ROC) and cross-validation with borewell yield data affirmed prediction accuracies of 78.4% and 84%, respectively. Spatial distribution analysis revealed that 30.39%, 30.86%, and 13.19% of the surveyed area fell within the poor, moderate, and good potentiality zones, respectively, whereas 15.86% and 9.69% were categorized as very poor and very good GPZs. Sensitivity analysis highlighted the significance of geology, elevation, geomorphology, slope, and lineament density as influencing parameters; elimination of any single parameter engendered significant alterations in the GPZ classification. The investigation culminated in the formulation of a block-wise sustainable groundwater management blueprint designed to inform policy initiatives.