El Acuífero del Valle de Mexicali y su relación con los ...€¦ · Valle de Mexicali and Yuma...

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El Acuífero del Valle de Mexicali y su relación con

los acuíferos de Imperial y Yuma

Jorge Ramírez HernándezResearcher. Instituto de Ingeniería, UABC April, 2019

Outline:

• Something about Colorado River delta evolution

• Colorado River flows, the water source

• Mexicali, Imperial and Yuma aquifers

• An integral groundwater system

• Principal remarks

Modified from Sykes, 1937

Colorado River Delta

Aprox

800,000 hectars

of wetlands

Colorado River Delta formation process

• Deposits of marine sediments due to sea transgressions.

• Continental sediment deposits from Colorado River.

• Actual delta’s crest was probably constructed duringmiddle Pliocene.

• Divided the delta in two areas. – Salton basin to the north

– Colorado delta to the south in connection with Gulf of California

• Discharge to the Gulf but ocasionally veered to thenorthwest discharging to Salton basin (last time was at thebegining of the XX century)

Data from The Colorado River at the Southerly International Boundary (USGS gage 09522200; 1950–2018)

Colorado River Hydrograph: natural vs controled flows

Colorado River Hydrograph: natural vs pulse flow 2014

Modified from Mueller et al, 2017

Colorado

River

Courses

Modified from Mueller et al, 2017

Extracted Volume

(X106 m3/año)

Groundwater depth(m)

Colorado River

discharge (X106

m3/año)

400

500

600

700

800

900

1,000

1,100

1,200

Vo

l. E

xp

lota

do

(X1

06m

3/a

ño

)

0

5,000

10,000

15,000

20,000

1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000

Tiempo (años)

Escu

rrim

ien

tos R

ío

Co

lora

do

(X

10

6 m

3/a

ño

)

4.00

5.00

6.00

7.00

8.00

9.00

10.00

11.00

Pro

f. N

ivel

Está

tico

(m

)

From Ramirez-Hernández, 2004

Valle de Mexicali aquifer

Groundwater levelcontours for 1972

Black dashed = measured

red = modelled

Taken from Rodríguez-Burgueño, 2012

Aquifer wells field

Taken from Rodríguez-Burgueño, 2012

Source: CONAGUA Wells location

Groundwater levelcontour compositionwith data from:Lesser, 2006USBR, 2015

Valle de Mexicali and Yuma aquifers

Taken from Kennedy, Rodriguez-Burgueño and Ramírez-Hernández, 2017

Groundwater Drawdown along CR

Modified from Ramírez-Hernández et al., 2018•

Imperial aquifer

Imperial ,1960-1965 before AAC and Coachella canal lining IID (2002)

90% of water is producing in theupper basin section.

Yuma aquifer

From Yuma, 1965 from Olmsted et al. (1973)0

Delta Geohidrological System

Taken from Ramírez-Hernández, 2019 under review.•

Water level countorscomposition: Coachella Valley from

Swain (1978) Imperial ,1960-1965

before AAC and Coachella canal lining IID (2002)

Yuma, 1965 from Olmsted et al. (1973)

Mexicali, 1972 from Díaz-Cabrera (2001)

Recharge and extraction are dinamic in all the system

Groundwater monitoring

Aquifer sustainability

Water recharge = water extraction

Principal remarks

• Colorado river is no longer the water source

• Recharge is due mainly because infiltration from irrigation

channels, return of irrigation water and horizontal flows.

• Efforts for reducing ag volumes because of pressure of

others sectors (outside the basin) are reducing the recharge.

• Water balance must define water exploitation politics in

order to reach a sustainable use of water.

• Actually there is no data to evaluate the recharge.

• The delta groundwater system must be managed in a

integrate way

(May 12, 2014)

Thanks…

(March 23, 2014)

(March 27. 2014)

BEFORE AFTER

DURING

Aquifer actual situation

• Water abstraction

– Water pumping is not measured

– SLRC valley increased volume

• Water recharge

– Vertical recharge is dimishing by channel linning (i.e. AAC)

– Optimization of irrigation water volume

– Water transfer out of the basin