PLoS ONE (Jan 2022)

How do turbidite systems behave from the hydrogeological point of view? New insights and open questions coming from an interdisciplinary work in southern Italy.

  • Pietro Rizzo,
  • Edoardo Severini,
  • Antonio Bucci,
  • Federico Bocchia,
  • Giuseppe Palladino,
  • Nicolò Riboni,
  • Anna Maria Sanangelantoni,
  • Roberto Francese,
  • Massimo Giorgi,
  • Paola Iacumin,
  • Federica Bianchi,
  • Claudio Mucchino,
  • Giacomo Prosser,
  • Domenico Mazzone,
  • Dario Avagliano,
  • Francesco Coraggio,
  • Antonella Caputi,
  • Fulvio Celico

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0268252
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 5
p. e0268252

Abstract

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Turbidite successions can behave either as aquitards or aquifers depending on their lithological and hydraulic features. In particular, post-depositional processes can increase rock permeability due to fracture development in the competent layers. Thus, at a local scale, turbidite systems warrant further detailed investigations, aimed at reconstructing reliable hydrogeological models. The objective of this work was to investigate from the hydrogeological perspective a turbiditic aquifer located in southern Italy, where several perennial and seasonal springs were detected. Considering the complex hydrodynamics of these systems at the catchment scale, to reach an optimal characterization, a multidisciplinary approach was adopted. The conceptual framework employed microbial communities as groundwater tracers, together with the physicochemical features and isotopic signature of springs and streams from water samples. Meanwhile, geophysical investigations coupled with the geological survey provided the contextualization of the hydrogeological data into the detailed geological reconstruction of the study area. This modus operandi allowed us to typify several differences among the samples, allowing identification of sources and paths of surface water and groundwater, along with diffuse groundwater outflow along streams. As a final result, a hydrogeological conceptual model was reconstructed, underlining how at a very local scale the lithologic, hydraulic, and geomorphological heterogeneity of the studied relief can lead to an improved hydrogeological conceptual model compared to that of other turbidite systems. These results open new questions about the hydrogeological behavior of turbiditic aquifers, which could be pivotal in future research. In fact, these systems could support relevant ecosystems and anthropic activities, especially where climate change will force the research of new (and probably less hydrogeologically efficient) water sources.