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Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory, Idaho Falls, ID 83415-2107
* Corresponding author (matted{at}inel.gov).
Received 28 March 2003.
| ABSTRACT |
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Abbreviations: CERCLA, Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act CFA, Central Facility Area INEEL, Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory INTEC, Idaho Nuclear Technology and Engineering Center LSIT, Large Scale Infiltration Test RWMC, Radioactive Waste Management Complex SDA, Subsurface Disposal Area
| INTRODUCTION |
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Of the facilities on the INEEL currently being investigated to assess their potential environmental impacts, two have significant potential vadose zone contamination sources. These are the Subsurface Disposal Area (SDA) at the Radioactive Waste Management Complex (RWMC) and the Idaho Nuclear Technology and Engineering Center (INTEC). Both facilities have undergone extensive vadose zone characterization efforts and have monitoring instrumentation systems in the vadose zone.
The characterization and monitoring activities have been conducted with the goal of understanding the mechanisms controlling water and contaminant movement in the lithologically complex subsurface at the sites. This conceptual understanding is embedded in simulation models that assist in the selection between possible remedial actions and in improving long-term monitoring systems in the vadose zone. The conceptual model of water and contaminant movement is developed from information gained from the facility characterization and monitoring programs, and from infiltration experiments conducted on the INEEL to improve understanding of water movement in the subsurface. These experiments were conducted at scales approaching those beneath the facilities of interest on the INEEL.
Experiments at the facility-scale allow examination of percolation processes at a scale adequate to include interaction between temporal infiltration processes and the complex underlying geologic structure. Disadvantages to experiments at the facility-scale include difficulties in experimental control and decreased data density.
This paper presents an overview of the large-scale experiments that have been conducted at the INEEL and describes what has been learned from the experiments and from characterization and monitoring activities at the INEEL. This information is summarized in a description of mechanisms controlling water movement as it transits the geologically complex vadose zone.
| BACKGROUND |
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The SDA is located in the southwest portion of the INEEL. Low-level, mixed, and transuranic radioactive waste was buried in shallow pits and trenches in the SDA from 1952 until 1970. Since 1970, transuranic waste has been stored in aboveground facilities. Mixed-waste disposal ceased in 1982; however, low-level waste is currently being buried in a portion of the SDA. The SDA overlies a thick stratigraphic sequence composed primarily of fractured basalts that are occasionally interrupted by fairly extensive sedimentary interbeds that were deposited during extended periods of volcanic quiescence (Fig. 2) . The three upper most interbeds beneath the SDA, named the AB, BC, and CD interbeds, are generally located at approximately 10, 33, and 69 m below land surface. Each of the interbeds is known to have some discontinuities. The AB interbed is fairly discontinuous and generally only exists beneath the northern half of the SDA, whereas the CD interbed is the most continuous beneath the facility.
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Idaho Nuclear Technology and Engineering Center, formerly the Idaho Chemical Processing Plant, is a multipurpose facility located approximately 12 km (7.5 mi) northeast of the SDA. Constructed in 1951, INTEC initially received and stored spent nuclear fuels, processed the fuels to recover 235U, and handled all waste generated by those functions. After 1992, INTEC began receiving and temporarily storing spent nuclear fuel and waste fission products resulting from spent fuel recovery processes. High-level liquid waste generated from these operations was stored in eleven 1100-m3 and four 110-m3 underground storage tanks. The area containing these tanks is called the tank farm. Contaminants found in the soils of the tank farm are the result of accidental releases and leaks from process piping, valve boxes, and sumps associated with tank operations and are also the result of cross-contamination from general operations and maintenance excavations. There is no evidence that the tanks themselves have leaked. Additional vadose zone contamination resulted from disposal of service wastewater into the percolation ponds located immediately south of the INTEC facility.
The vadose zone monitoring system at INTEC (consisting of tensiometers, lysimeters, piezometers, soil moisture probes, and temperature sensors) is designed to monitor three distinct intervals: the surficial alluvium between 0 and 18 m below land surface, the shallow perched zone between 18 and 60 m, and the deep perched zone between 60 m and the surface of the aquifer at approximately 140 m. The thickness of surficial sediments at INTEC ranges from 8 to >15 m and generally contains more than 50% gravel-size material. Commonly, there is a layer of silt- or clay-size material at the interface of the surficial alluvium and the uppermost basalt. The deeper geologic structure beneath the INTEC facility is similar to that observed at the SDA but exhibits less extensive lateral basalt flow and interbed continuity (Forsythe, 2003). Compared with the SDA, the INTEC monitoring system is not as extensive and does not have a long monitoring history. The most lengthy and continuous perched water information (19922000) was recorded by pressure transducerdata logger pairs installed in several perched water wells in the northern half of INTEC. Approximately 76 vadose zone monitoring wells exist at the INTEC facility; most of these wells monitor the shallow and deep-perched water zones. Tensiometers were installed in approximately 30 locations to observe soil matric potentials.
Numerous field investigations pertaining to infiltration of water have been conducted at the INEEL. Two of these field investigations, the Large Scale Infiltration Test (LSIT) and the Spreading Area Tracer Test, approach the scale of the facilities. In both of these field investigations, water was supplied to the soil surface under sustained positive hydrostatic head and the resulting movement of water in the subsurface was monitored to assess the influence of heterogeneity within the fractured basalt and the sedimentary interbeds. A short overview of each experiment follows.
| LARGE-SCALE INFILTRATION TEST |
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| SPREADING AREA TRACER TEST |
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In 1999, the USGS conducted a tracer test by adding a conservative tracer (naphthalene sulfonate) to the water in the two spreading areas closest to the SDA. A summary of this tracer test and an interpretation of its results can be found in Nimmo et al. (2002)( 2004). Perched water monitoring wells at the sedimentary interbeds and groundwater wells were periodically sampled for the detection of the tracer.
| WATER SOURCES: NATURAL AND ANTHROPOGENIC |
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Precipitation is a highly variable source of water at the INEEL. Based on a 38-yr historical record analyzed by Clawson et al. (1989), the annual average precipitation was approximately 22 cm yr1 (6.0 x 104 m d1) with a maximum of 36 cm yr1 (9.9 x 104 m d1) and a minimum of 11 cm yr1 (3.0 x 104 m d1). Heaviest precipitation usually occurs in the spring and early summer and most of the precipitation events are <0.25 cm d1 (2.5 x 103 m d1). However, thundershowers can produce a significant amount of precipitation in a short time. The historic record of precipitation from the Central Facility Area (CFA) weather station, approximately 8 km northeast of the SDA, and 5 km south of INTEC, indicates precipitation intensities >2.5 cm h1 (6.0 x 101 m d1) in eight of the 38 yr at CFA. The long CFA precipitation record is likely representative of conditions at the southern portion of the INEEL (Magnuson, 1993), including both the SDA and INTEC.
A typical winter produces snow cover from mid November to mid April (Clawson et al., 1989). The CFA snowfall records indicate an average snowfall of 0.7 m and ranges from 0.17 to 1.5 m. Moderate to strong surface winds cross the plains at the INEEL and redistribute much of the snow, resulting in drifts exceeding 1 m in depth.
| SUBSURFACE DISPOSAL AREASPECIFIC WATER SOURCES |
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Intense summer thunderstorms and melting snow create surface water ponds, which are the major recharge source at the SDA. The SDA land surface has been severely altered by the creation of excavated pits and trenches for waste disposal. These excavation activities destroyed many of the native plant communities and recontoured surface topography as a result of mounding soil on top of waste pits, building roads, covering trenches, and constructing soil vaults. As a result, local surface ponding after heavy summer thunderstorms or early spring snowmelt is common. During the winter months, melt-water runoff atop frozen soil creates localized surface ponds and has enhanced recharge (Martian and Magnuson, 1994; Bishop, 1996). Much of this surface water infiltrates into the ground, although a portion is diverted off-site through a series of unlined ditches. It is likely that these episodic high-intensity precipitation events and melting snow contribute to the bulk of recharge through the SDA.
Estimates of infiltration rates in undisturbed natural sediments adjacent to the SDA are small and suggest that approximately 5% of the annual precipitation infiltrates past the root zone. Cecil and others (1992) measured the infiltration rate using three separate methods in undisturbed soil immediately north of the SDA. Chlorine-36 and T profiles were determined to approximately 5.5 m in depth. These measurements indicated infiltration rates of 0.71 and 1.1 cm yr1 (1.9 x 105 and 3.0 x 105 m d1). An infiltration rate using the tritium mass balance method gave a rate of 0.89 cm yr1 (2.4 x 105 m d1). The Darcian flux beneath the root zone (below 3.7 m in this case) for a 4-yr period averaged 0.36 cm yr1 (9.9 x 106 m d1). These low infiltration rates are considered to represent the background infiltration rate and are often used in the SDA Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA) performance assessment numerical transport models as 1 cm yr1 (2.7 x 105 m d1) (Magnuson and Sondrup, 1998).
Infiltration estimates for CERCLA modeling activities through the SDA suggest that the infiltration rate may be almost an order of magnitude greater inside the SDA compared with diffuse recharge outside the SDA (Martian, 1995). At the SDA, McElroy (1990)( 1993) and Bishop (1996) measured a wide variety of infiltration rates using neutron moisture measurements from the neutron access tubes. This monitoring network was enhanced in the early 1990s to a total of 27 measuring locations located throughout the SDA. Net infiltration was calculated from changes in the measured moisture content profile below a depth of approximate 1 m (3 ft), assuming changes from land surface to 1 m were due to evapotranspiration. During 5 yr, (1989, 19931996) sufficient data were available to estimate the net infiltration. These estimates ranged from 0.3 to 55.9 cm yr1 (8.2 x 106 to 1.5 x 103 m d1) depending on the year and location of measurement. They attributed these highly variable estimates to snow drifting and plowing, presence or absence of frozen soil, soil disturbance, topographic variations, and local drainage patterns.
On the basis of the variable infiltration suggested by McElroy (1990)( 1993) and Bishop (1996), Martian (1995) developed an infiltration distribution map for the SDA to be used in the risk assessment models. Martian simplified the infiltration to the SDA by suggesting that it could be adequately described by using three constant infiltration rates of 0.64, 3.68, and 24.1 cm yr1 (1.8, 10, and 66 x 105 m d1). The location of these zones was based on topographic considerations and inverse modeling to the neutron monitoring moisture profiles. The spatial average of Martian's infiltration rates assigned inside the SDA is 8.5 cm yr1 (2.3 x 104 m d1), a value much higher than that considered to be background (
1 cm yr1 [
2.7 x 105 m d1]). The higher infiltration rate through the SDA surficial soils are supported by greater soil water potential measurements beneath the SDA as compared with those outside the SDA (McElroy and Hubbell, 2003).
Although the potential of the Big Lost River flooding the SDA is low, late winter rain and snowmelt events have produced three occurrences (1962, 1969, 1982) of focused recharge at the SDA. Vigil (1988) estimated the amount of water that infiltrated through the SDA for each event using historical documentation that described the size and location of the pits and trenches were active at the time of the flood event. Vigil concludes that 34000 m3 infiltrated during 1962, 43000 m3 of water for infiltration in 1969, and approximately 10000 m3 of water during the last flooding event in 1982. These singular infiltration events have been incorporated into numerical models (Magnuson and Sondrup, 1998), and these volumes are approximately equal to the annual recharge through the SDA.
| IDAHO NUCLEAR TECHNOLOGY AND ENGINEERING CENTERSPECIFIC WATER SOURCES |
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| WATER MOVEMENT AT THE SURFICIAL SEDIMENTBASALT INTERFACE |
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Some lateral movement along the basalt surface should be expected when the moisture flux moving vertically through the surficial sediments is greater than the hydraulic conductivity of the underlying basalt matrix, or when there is a basal clay facies at the sedimentbasalt interface. Lateral movement of water along the sedimentbasalt interface has been documented within the SDA (McElroy, 1993). In a study described by Hull and Bishop (2004), analysis of the Cl/Br ratios in surficial sediments indicate MgCl2 brines used for dust suppression on roads within the SDA primarily spread 13 m from the treated roads. These monitoring results suggest that lateral movement of water and dissolved solutes at the uppermost sedimentarybasalt interface does occur, but it is not extensive.
At INTEC, despite the large recharge flux from the Big Lost River, the former percolation ponds, and the sewage treatment pond, lateral spreading at the surficial sedimentbasalt interface is minimal. Beneath the former percolation ponds, perched water boundaries in the surficial alluvium rarely extend much beyond the pond perimeters (Cecil et al., 1991). The mechanism for this lack of lateral spread may be due to the much coarser surficial sediments present at INTEC allowing the water to find pathways into the basalt, the lack of a basal clay often found at the interface, or a highly fractured basalt formation at the interface.
| WATER MOVEMENT WITHIN BASALT FORMATIONS |
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When the water is supplied to the soil surface under positive hydrostatic head (e.g., LSIT, the spreading areas, INTEC, and the flooded SDA pits), the primary water movement in the basalt flows will be within the fracture network and rubble contact zones between basalt flows. The fractures and rubble zones will control the movement of water because of their high permeability compared with the competent basalt matrix. Water infiltration results in a rapid vertical advance of a wetting front through the basalt portion of the subsurface. Monitoring results from the LSIT (Dunnivant et al., 1998) indicated that beneath the infiltration pond, wetting front advance averaged about 5 m d1, although the range was highly variable (1.417.7 m d1). Water did not progress as a unified front sequentially wetting each zone as a function of depth beneath the pond. Vertical movement of the water through the fractured basalt vadose zone was observed; however, there was no evidence of lateral water movement to the monitoring locations 15 m (50 ft) outside the pond boundaries.
Unsaturated flow in fractures may have been recorded for the slow snowmelt wetting front advancement that was documented to a depth of 17.3 m beneath the SDA. Hubbell et al. (2002) used advanced tensiometers to monitor the wetting front advance at a variety of depths during the 1999 snowmelt. They calculated wetting front advances rates of about 0.1 m d1 in the uppermost basalt formation. Although the advanced tensiometer data indicated short-term perched water at the surficial sedimentbasalt interface (AB), the deeper basalt matrix never became saturated during this infiltration event. This SDA snowmelt wetting front advance rate was approximately 10 to 100 times less than that estimated under near continuous ponding conditions at the LSIT.
Other long-term monitoring studies suggest that the flow mechanism and/or the flow pathways may be temporally variable. Advanced tensiometers at a field site in Idaho Falls (Hubbell et al., 2002) monitored the progression of the first arrival of a wetting front as a function of depth. Four separate infiltration events were identified between 1996 and 1999. The upper most tensiometer was located at the sedimentbasalt (AB) interface. Four additional tensiometers were placed in the fractured basalt to a depth of 15.5 m. The sequence of the wetting front advance in the fractured basalt, as determined from advanced tensiometer response, was typically not correlated with depth. Furthermore, the pattern of wetting front advance was not consistent between the four infiltration events. These results suggest that the flow pathways in the fractures are a function of the infiltration event and likely the magnitude and duration of the ponding of water at the sedimentbasalt interface.
| WATER MOVEMENT NEAR SEDIMENTARY INTERBEDS |
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The physical mechanisms that could account for perching as described by Cecil et al. (1991) can be applied to the interbeds layers at INEEL. The first mechanism to cause perching at the interbeds is a permeability contrast. In this case, the interbed material would have a lower permeability than that of the overlying fractured basalt. Smith (2004) and Nimmo et al. (2004) discuss the geologic conceptual model and provide supporting data on permeability contrasts between the basalt formation and the interbed material. Applying the second mechanism, alteration of the sedimentary material due to the heating of the interbed surface material may create a low permeability zone along the upper surface of the interface sediments and create perched water conditions on top of the sedimentary interbed. Third, low permeability lenses within the interbeds may create a sufficient permeability contrast to create perched water within and above the interbed. Finally, infilling of fractures with fine-grained material at the basaltsedimentary interbed could effectively seal the interface between the basalt and the sedimentary interbed. These perching mechanisms associated with the basaltsedimentary interface are illustrated in Fig. 5 (Items 69).
Chemical detection at interbeds deeper in the vadose zone indicate that horizontal spreading of solutes increases as a function of depth. Chloride from the MgCl2 brine applications to roads within the SDA was detected in a lysimeter sample at the BC interbed 110 m north of the nearest treated road (Hull and Bishop, 2004). Horizontal lateral spreading of the Cl at the BC interbed is approximately three times the maximum distance of that detected in the surficial sediments. Although the Cl detection could either support a conceptual model of lateral spreading along basalt interfaces with subsequent detection at the interbed or vertical transport through the basalt formation with subsequent lateral movement along the basaltsedimentary interface, data from the LSIT would suggest that the second conceptual model would be more plausible.
Mechanisms associated with the basaltsedimentary interface results in a diversion of vertical flow of water in the basalt above interbed surfaces. During the LSIT, water moved vertically downwards in the basalt formation (Dunnivant et al., 1998), despite passing through four distinct basalt flows above the sedimentary interbed (Wood and Norrell, 1996). Lateral spreading of water in the vadose zone was only documented when it reached a sedimentary interbed at 55 m and flowed along topographic lows immediately above this interbed (Dunnivant et al., 1998). Rapid detected tracers in a monitoring well at the CD interbed beneath the SDA that were placed in spreading areas more than a kilometer away are hypothesized to travel through saturated basalt fractures, tension cracks, lava tubes, or rubble zones rather than through the interbeds themselves Nimmo et al. (2002).
Defining the sources and lateral extent of perched water in the vadose zone has been a major focus of INTEC investigations. Three distinct perched water zones exist beneath INTEC: (i) at the surface alluviumbasalt interface, (ii) a shallow perched zone associated with interbeds at the 33- and 43-m (110- and 140-ft) depths, and (iii) a deep perched zone associated with an interbed at the 115-m (380-ft) depth (Forsythe, 2003). One former conceptual model assumed that the shallow perched water zone was laterally extensive and hydraulically continuous beneath the INTEC facility. Recent investigations (Forsythe, 2003) have modified this conceptual model to suggest that the perched water beneath the former percolation ponds and perched water beneath the tank farm are two distinct shallow perched water zones in part from the lack of extensive interbed continuity.
The lateral continuity of interbeds in relation to the scale of the surface infiltration, the lithology of the interbed, as well as the volume of water applied to the soil surface can result in either minor impedance to recharge or act as an effective barrier to episodic recharge. Analysis of drilling logs near the 36-ha (88-acre) SDA indicates that approximately 10% of the boreholes did not intercept either the BC or CD interbeds (INEEL, 2001). Although both of these interbeds are considered to be laterally continuous, at the scale of the SDA, numerous gaps in the interbeds could result in recharge bypassing these interbeds. At the smaller scale LSIT site, water moves essentially vertical downward in the basalt until it reaches the first sedimentary interbed. Although only two wells were drilled through the BC interbed at the LSIT, neutron and natural
log interpretations from these wells indicated a slow wetting of the interbed and support the concept that the interbed acts as a semipermeable barrier for water (Wood and Norrell, 1996). In contrast, data from the larger-scale spreading area tracer test suggest that the rapid tracer detection in the groundwater beneath the spreading areas (22 m d1) indicates that the sedimentary interbeds are not effective barriers to vertical flow at least under ponded infiltration conditions (Nimmo et al., 2002). It is likely that the interbeds beneath the spreading areas are likely not completely continuous and allowed water to bypass the interbeds (Item 10 in Fig. 5) and continue rapidly downward.
Depending on the flux of the percolating water and the lateral continuity of the interbed, a portion of the water will perch on these interbeds to produce a more steady-state infiltration condition. Perched water conditions exist on the interbeds beneath the SDA due to episodic snowmelt and from lateral spreading from the Big Lost River or the spreading areas at the deeper interbeds. Although perched water on the interbeds likely contributes to lateral spreading of contamination in the subsurface, it also impedes the rapid wetting front advance through the basalt fractures. Subsequent infiltration through the interbeds would result in a more temporally uniform infiltration event below the interbeds. Analysis of the advanced tensiometer measurements confirms that near steady-state conditions exist in portions of the deeper subsurface (McElroy and Hubbell, 2004).
Using a unit gradient approach, a number of investigators have attempted to use hydraulic analyses from soil cores collected during drilling campaigns to estimate the infiltration flux through the interbeds. Magnuson and McElroy (1993) assumed a unit gradient and used data collected from soil cores to estimate the infiltration rate at the 73-m (CD) interbed. They estimated the rate of infiltration to be between 4 and 10 cm yr1 (1.1 and 2.7 x 104 m d1). McElroy and Hubbell (2004) used advanced tensiometer data to 74 m to indicate large-scale unit gradient conditions in the vadose zone at the SDA. Advanced tensiometers data were used to estimate recharge through the BC and CD interbeds (McElroy and Hubbell, 2003). They used water potential measurements from the BC interbed, ranging from 30 to 195 cm (3 to 19 kPa), to estimate steady-state flux rates of 1.6 to >21000 cm yr1 (4.4 x 105 m d1 to >5.8 x 101 m d1). In the CD interbed, the measured water potentials were lower and ranged from 109 to 360 cm (10 to 36 kPa) and corresponded with flux estimates from 1.4 to 32 cm yr1 (3.8 x 105 to 8.8 x 104 m d1). They discarded the high BC flux calculations as likely not meeting the assumptions of homogeneity of the interbed material or local unit gradient conditions and considered that a deep recharge rate in the range of 1 to 32 cm yr1 (2.7 x 105 to 8.8 x 101 m d1) was appropriate.
| SUMMARY |
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The temporal and spatial distribution of water available for infiltration is unique for the SDA and INTEC. The evaluation of the recharge sources is complicated by the type and intensity of precipitation, time of the year, alterations of surficial soils, number of potential anthropogenic sources of water near the surface, and infiltration from rivers and intermittent surface water ponding during spring melt events and summer thundershowers. Infiltration inside the SDA is estimated to be approximately 30% of the natural precipitation, as compared with approximately 5% outside the SDA due to disturbance of the surficial soil and reduction in vegetation. Temporal surface ponding and past episodic flooding are thought to be the primary contributing factors to the observed migration of dissolved-phase contaminants at the SDA. The identification of water sources at INTEC has been complicated due to colocated large volume recharge sources within and near the facility.
Analysis of long-term monitoring data and the results for two large-scale field tests have resulted in a general conceptual model of water movement in the vadose zone beneath the INEEL. Once water has percolated past the root zone the presence of the surficial sedimentbasalt interface produces some perching of the percolated water with limited lateral movement. Water movement in basalt formations is mostly in preferential pathways due to the complex connectivity of the fractures, is gravity dominated, and results in mostly rapid vertical flow, especially under conditions of positive hydrostatic head. Detection of the wetting front is typically not sequential with depth and has been shown to vary between episodic infiltration events. At the basaltsediment interface, perched water is often detected and has resulted in more lateral spreading of recharge than at the surficial sedimentbasalt interface. Recharge of surface water far from the facilities can influence the development and lateral movement of perched water at the sedimentary interbeds. Lateral extent and mechanisms associated with the interbed that create a lower permeability zone control the lateral extent and connectivity of perched water bodies. Gaps in the sedimentary interbeds will allow some of the recharge water to bypass the interbeds and rapidly continue toward the aquifer. However, if the interbed is mostly continuous, it will cause significant lateral spreading along topographic contours, and may allow some of the water to infiltrate through the interbed, resulting in a nearly steady-state percolation flux beneath the interbed.
A number of implications for the INEEL waste area groups can be generalized from these results. First, controlling the amount and temporal and spatial distribution of the infiltration flux at the soil surface is important. The amount and lateral extent of water perching in the vadose zone at the INEEL is correlated with the volume and distribution of water infiltration at the soil surface. If these positive hydrostatic head zones could be eliminated, the rate of water movement through the fractured basalt formation would be greatly diminished. Second, defining gaps in interbeds is necessary for assessment of fast flow pathways to the underlying aquifer. Continuity of the interbed in relation to the aerial extent of the recharge source is important in determining whether the interbeds will significantly impede vertical water movement at the basaltsedimentary interface. Finally, the influence of nearby surface water sources should be investigated as to their influence of perched water beneath the facilities. Results from tracer studies discussed in this paper have indicated significant lateral movement of water at the deeper sedimentary interbeds and suggest a mechanism for lateral spreading of potential contaminated water beneath the facilities.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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