Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://117.252.14.250:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/5186
Title: Compound Wells for Skimming Freshwater from Fresh Saline Aquifers
Authors: Kashyap, Deepak
Saravanan, K.
Shalabey, M. E. E.
Sharma, Anupama
Keywords: Fresh–Saline aquifers
Groundwater development
Groundwater salinity
Groundwater
Issue Date: 2016
Publisher: CRC Press
Citation: Groundwater Assessment, Modeling, and Management, Ed. Thangarajan, M. & Singh V.P.,Chap 23, pg 351 -364
Abstract: Groundwater development provides assured water supply for agricultural, municipal, and industrial activities. The agricultural groundwater development not only augments the canal water supply, but also facilitates timely irrigation at critical times. However, several aquifers worldwide contain fresh usable groundwater only in a not-so-thick layer toward the top. This freshwater layer is underlain by a relatively thick layer of unusable saline water. Such Fresh–Saline aquifers (termed henceforth as F–S aquifers) occurring invariably in coastal regions are quite common in inland aquifers also. In coastal regions, groundwater salinity is mostly of marine origin such as salinity originating from marine transgressions, seawater intrusion, incidental flooding by seawater, and groundwater enriched in salts by seawater sprays.
URI: http://117.252.14.250:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/5186
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