From Geoscience Australia

Mapping freshwater lenses in the Cooper Creek floodplain using airborne electromagnetics

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Created 20/01/2025

Updated 20/01/2025

Cooper Creek is a dryland river system that extends from the western Great Dividing Range in Central Queensland to Lake Eyre in South Australia. The middle course of the Cooper Creek is characterised by anabranching river channels across a wide floodplain that flow intermittently due to monsoonal flooding event higher in the catchment. As floodwaters recede, freshwater stagnates within numerous deeper segments of river channels forming ‘waterholes’ which support ecosystems with significant ecological and cultural value. However, there is little evidence that shallow groundwater discharges into these surface water bodies and the link between surface water and groundwater is not well understood. This study aims to demonstrate how airborne electromagnetics (AEM) and other geoscientific data can be integrated to identify recharge within shallow saline groundwater systems, which are so common in arid inland Australia.

The regional water table underneath the floodplain is shallow (38,000 TDS), with a chemical signature suggesting salts were concentrated by evapotranspiration. Surface swelling clays likely limits the amount of recharge that occurs through the floodplain itself. However, a detailed study by Cendón et al (2010) found that during high flow events, floodwater scoured the base of the waterholes allowing freshwater to recharges into the shallow groundwater system forming chemically distinct freshwater lenses.

AEM is a geophysical technique capable of estimating bulk conductivity for the top few hundred metres of the subsurface. Part of the AusAEM Eastern Resource Corridor survey (Ley-Cooper 2021) crossed the Cooper Creek floodplain with a 20km line spacing. The bulk conductivity models delivered as part of this survey resolved the top of the saline water table regionally. In several locations, we identified resistive lenses sitting on the shallow water table which coincide with river channels that are frequently inundated.

Cendón, D.I., Larsen, J.R., Jones, B.G., Nanson, G.C., Rickleman, D., Hankin, S.I., Pueyo, J.J. and Maroulis, J., 2010. Freshwater recharge into a shallow saline groundwater system, Cooper Creek floodplain, Queensland, Australia. Journal of Hydrology, 392(3-4), pp.150-163. LeyCooper, Y. 2021. Exploring for the Future AusAEM Eastern Resources Corridor: 2021 Airborne Electromagnetic Survey TEMPEST® airborne electromagnetic data and GALEI inversion conductivity estimates. Geoscience Australia, Canberra. This Abstract was submitted/presented to the 2022 Australasian Groundwater Conference 21-23 November (https://www.aig.org.au/events/australasian-groundwater-conference-2022/)

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Field Value
Title Mapping freshwater lenses in the Cooper Creek floodplain using airborne electromagnetics
Language eng
Licence notspecified
Landing Page https://devweb.dga.links.com.au/data/dataset/a1925a3c-f4a2-48c5-b44d-f3258ec40cd0
Contact Point
Geoscience Australia
clientservices@ga.gov.au
Reference Period 04/08/2022
Geospatial Coverage {"type": "Polygon", "coordinates": [[[110.5569, -44.717], [155.5569, -44.717], [155.5569, -11.008], [110.5569, -11.008], [110.5569, -44.717]]]}
Data Portal data.gov.au

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This dataset was originally found on data.gov.au "Mapping freshwater lenses in the Cooper Creek floodplain using airborne electromagnetics". Please visit the source to access the original metadata of the dataset:
https://devweb.dga.links.com.au/data/dataset/mapping-freshwater-lenses-in-the-cooper-creek-floodplain-using-airborne-electromagnetics

No duplicate datasets found.