Hydrology and Earth System Sciences (Aug 2024)

Short high-accuracy tritium data time series for assessing groundwater mean transit times in the vadose and saturated zones of the Luxembourg Sandstone aquifer

  • L. Gourdol,
  • M. K. Stewart,
  • U. Morgenstern,
  • L. Pfister,
  • L. Pfister

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/hess-28-3519-2024
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 28
pp. 3519 – 3547

Abstract

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Among the manifold of environmental tracers at hand, tritium is the only one that can give information on groundwater age within the timescale of 100 years for the entire flow system, i.e., unsaturated and saturated. However, while in the Southern Hemisphere, a single water sample is sufficient for tritium-based young groundwater dating, several tritium measurements spanning multiple years are still needed in the Northern Hemisphere to disentangle the natural cosmogenic tritium input from that caused by the atmospheric thermonuclear weapons tests mainly carried out in the early 1960s. Although it is advised to focus tritium dating on sites where long chronicles of tritium data are available, in this study we tested the potential for short high-accuracy tritium data series (∼4 years) to date groundwater from 35 springs draining the Luxembourg Sandstone aquifer (central western Europe). We determined groundwater mean transit times using the lumped-parameter model approach in a Monte Carlo uncertainty estimation framework to provide uncertainty ranges inherent to the low number of tritium data at hand and their related analytical errors. Our results show that unambiguous groundwater mean transit time assessments cannot be determined solely based on such recent short tritium time series, given that several ranges of mean transit times appeared theoretically possible. Nonetheless we succeeded in discriminating groundwater mean transit times in the vadose and saturated zones of the aquifer through a stepwise decision process guided with several supplementary data. The mean transit time required for water to cross the vadose zone was estimated to be between 0.5±0.5 and 8.1±1.2 years depending on the spring, while for water to flow through the saturated zone, it varied from 5.7±2.4 to 18.9±4.6 years (median ± half of the 5–95 percentile range). Our findings are consistent with both the tritium measurements of individual springs and the hydrogeological context of the study area. We specifically corroborated the dating results using the known hydrogeological properties of the Luxembourg Sandstone aquifer, the hydrochemistry of the studied springs, and their discharge dynamics. When translated into water velocities (which average ∼12 and ∼170 m yr−1 for the vadose and the saturated zones, respectively), the tritium dating results mirrored the horizontal–vertical anisotropy of the aquifer's hydraulic properties caused by the bedded character of the Luxembourg Sandstone. In addition to improving our understanding of water transit times in the Luxembourg Sandstone aquifer, this study demonstrates how it is currently possible to use short tritium time series to date young groundwater bodies at new sites in central Europe.