Hydrogeological (Groundwater) Assessment Guideline PDF
Hydrogeological (Groundwater) Assessment Guideline PDF
Hydrogeological (Groundwater) Assessment Guideline PDF
HYDROGEOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
(GROUNDWATER QUALITY) GUIDELINES
HYDROGEOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
(GROUNDWATER QUALITY) GUIDELINES
HYDROGEOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
(GROUNDWATER QUALITY) GUIDELINES
EPA Victoria
40 City Road, Southbank
Victoria 3006 AUSTRALIA
September 2006
Publication 668
ISBN 0 7306 7658 7
EPA acknowledges the contribution of Anthony Lane of Lane Consulting (now Lane Piper),
John Leonard (John Leonard Consulting Services), and Dr Tamie Weaver (University of
Melbourne) in the preparation of this document.
EPA Victoria
HYDROGEOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
(GROUNDWATER QUALITY) GUIDELINES
FOREWORD
Few Victorians would deny the importance of protecting our environment for current and future generations.
Contamination of land can be commonly encountered where land has been used for storage, handling and/or
disposal of chemicals and wastes. Frequently, waste and chemical handling at historical industrial premises was
not consistent with current practices, leaving a legacy of site contamination that is encountered during
redevelopment. Recent trends to redevelop former industrial land, particularly in inner urban areas, have
highlighted this issue.
Many organisations are now using a hydrogeological assessment as one of the range of tools available to assist
in assessing the condition of the environment they manage. Contaminated land audits also rely on
hydrogeological assessment reports.
Similarly, hydrogeological assessment is a critical element in assessing the risk posed to the environment by
existing or proposed waste disposal and storage facilities, as well as chemical and petroleum storage handling.
These guidelines provide a detailed overview of the requirements for a hydrogeological assessment. A
hydrogeological site assessment that follows these guidelines will provide good quality information to aid
owners, developers, potential purchasers and regulators to identify the risk to health and the environment from
potential contamination.
MICK BOURKE
Chairman
EPA Victoria
Environmental Auditing
HYDROGEOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
(GROUNDWATER QUALITY) GUIDELINES
TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION.....................................................................................................................................................5
GROUNDWATER CONTAMINATION ........................................................................................................................ 6
CONTAMINATION SOURCES ................................................................................................................................. 6
GROUNDWATER MOVEMENT AND PROCESSES.......................................................................................................7
RISK FROM CONTAMINATED GROUNDWATER .........................................................................................................7
EPA Victoria
HYDROGEOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
(GROUNDWATER QUALITY) GUIDELINES
inform industry and the community about EPA
INTRODUCTION
natural environment.
The State Environment Protection Policy
(Groundwaters of Victoria) (SEPP (GoV)) describes a
hydrogeological assessment as a process to
determine any
landfilling
site contamination.
Environmental Auditing
HYDROGEOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
(GROUNDWATER QUALITY) GUIDELINES
groundwater, when considering planning
applications, and permits for service station
construction, or when considering the
CONTAMINATION SOURCES
Many activities can cause groundwater
contamination. Contaminant sources can be sudden
of a site or business.
These guidelines describe the basics of groundwater
Is groundwater polluted?
contain.
GROUNDWATER CONTAMINATION
worse.
EPA Victoria
HYDROGEOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
(GROUNDWATER QUALITY) GUIDELINES
Where the contamination source is above the water
contaminants.
use.
Environmental Auditing
HYDROGEOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
(GROUNDWATER QUALITY) GUIDELINES
Where there may be a risk to aquatic ecosystems
The HA comprises:
ecosystem.
Wherever groundwater remediation is required (for
example, pump and treat, multiphase extraction, insitu enhanced biodegradation, reactive barrier
environmental risk
field investigation and testing to improve the
conceptual model, if necessary
THE HYDROGEOLOGICAL
ASSESSMENT PROCESS
contamination
EPA Victoria
HYDROGEOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
(GROUNDWATER QUALITY) GUIDELINES
expected transport and fate of groundwater
contaminants
OBJECTIVES
Clear objectives must be determined before
in the environment.
The outcomes from the HA may be any of the
following:
risk.
future pollution)
questions:
ongoing management of groundwater
contamination, including containment or
monitoring
further HA, monitoring and possibly aquifer cleanup trials where significant groundwater
contamination occurs
ongoing groundwater clean-up to restore the
beneficial uses protected by SEPP (GoV).
contamination
hydrogeological setting identifying aquifers,
aquitards and their configuration and properties,
groundwater flow directions and rates,
groundwater quality and vulnerability to
contamination
contamination state of the groundwater in
individual aquifers and aquitards at the site
Environmental Auditing
HYDROGEOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
(GROUNDWATER QUALITY) GUIDELINES
HYDROGEOLOGICAL DESK STUDY
posed by contamination.
A.
should be undertaken:
Characterise the site geology and identify units
10
EPA Victoria
HYDROGEOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
(GROUNDWATER QUALITY) GUIDELINES
Measure groundwater levels to estimate the rates
movement.
monitoring bores.
materials).
or contaminants
separate-phase (LNAPL or DNAPL) sampling,
Environmental Auditing
11
HYDROGEOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
(GROUNDWATER QUALITY) GUIDELINES
It must be recognised that sites with significant
help:
As information is gathered, further phases of field
investigation and data analysis may be required.
It is important to recognise that the investigation
bores might not be in the best location for long-term
monitoring at the site, and additional bores could be
required for this purpose.
management.
12
EPA Victoria
HYDROGEOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
(GROUNDWATER QUALITY) GUIDELINES
and error bands, and details of the sensitivity of the
Environmental Auditing
13
HYDROGEOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
(GROUNDWATER QUALITY) GUIDELINES
Drilling bores for investigation, monitoring or
contamination.
Appendix B).
Surveying of the elevation of the water level
measuring point (usually the high point on the
14
EPA Victoria
HYDROGEOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
(GROUNDWATER QUALITY) GUIDELINES
Bores that are not required or are damaged must be
LEVEL MEASUREMENT
Groundwater level measurements are essential to
encrustation.
Bores on sites with public access must be locked.
HYDRAULIC PROPERTIES
level data:
In all but the most basic HA it is necessary to obtain
data on the hydraulic properties of the aquifer
system. Knowledge of aquifer hydraulic properties is
necessary to estimate groundwater flow velocities,
MONITORING PROCEDURE
laboratory testing.
Presence of light NAPL floating on the water. This
requires special care in measuring the water
Environmental Auditing
15
HYDROGEOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
(GROUNDWATER QUALITY) GUIDELINES
level elevation and NAPL thickness because of
density differences.
uncontaminated groundwater.
CHEMISTRY DETERMINATION
effects.
The choice of analytes should take into account the
Effervescent water such as in mineral water areas
or at landfills may be problematic to monitor.
Specialist expertise should be sought in this
regard.
GROUNDWATER SAMPLING
Background water quality information is required for
every HA. The HA may include a program targeting
specific contaminants and degradation products
groundwater monitoring.
The choice of laboratory test method and the
Regardless of the method chosen to purge a bore
prior to sampling, generally the same sampling
16
EPA Victoria
HYDROGEOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
(GROUNDWATER QUALITY) GUIDELINES
laboratories that are NATA-certified for the specified
analysis.
Reporting.
The HA report should include sufficient information
on QA/QC (including records) to enable an
DATA MANAGEMENT
include:
(reviewer)
custody forms
laboratory (and any other relevant) accreditation
REPORTS
Environmental Auditing
17
HYDROGEOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
(GROUNDWATER QUALITY) GUIDELINES
analysis and interpretation of hydrogeological data is
CONTENT
Site overview.
reproducible.
content.
aquitard(s)?
discharge areas?
models.
18
EPA Victoria
HYDROGEOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
(GROUNDWATER QUALITY) GUIDELINES
How and where did contaminants enter the ground
and the aquifer system?
What is the extent of the contaminated
groundwater and how is this defined?
How do the levels of contamination compare to
criteria in ANZECC (1992) and ANZECC and
ARMCANZ (2000)?
Are LNAPL or DNAPL contaminants present in
dissolved, residual or likely separate phases?
If present, how do petroleum hydrocarbon levels
compare to Dutch Investigation criteria?
Which aquifers and aquitards are affected by
contamination?
Do contaminants exhibit evidence of natural
attenuation in the aquifer and, if so, over what
time frames?
What are the protected beneficial uses that may
be at risk?
How likely are any impacted beneficial uses to be
realised?
What and where are the receptors of the
contaminated groundwater and when are these
receptors likely to be affected?
Is the current and future risk of impact on
receptors low?
Has the current HA assessed all the site issues or
is more work required?
Environmental Auditing
19
HYDROGEOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
(GROUNDWATER QUALITY) GUIDELINES
SECTION
TEXT CONTENT
SUPPORTING INFORMATION
SUMMARY
INTRODUCTION
Purpose / objective
Background
Scope
Locality plan.
Site plan.
SITE OVERVIEW
Description
Setting
History
Previous Studies
Summary
HA desk study
Data sources
Data quality
Data summary
Field study
HA field study
Scope
Methods
Results
20
EPA Victoria
HYDROGEOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
(GROUNDWATER QUALITY) GUIDELINES
SECTION
TEXT CONTENT
SUPPORTING INFORMATION
Topographic plan.
Tabulation of monthly rainfall and pan
evaporation data.
Stream stage/flow hydrographs.
Geological map.
Tabulated geological column showing
main aquifers, aquitards and properties
(hydraulic conductivity, transmissivity,
storativity, aquifer thickness and
porosity).
Hydrogeological cross-sections showing
the levels of surface facilities, geology,
aquifer/aquitard units, intervals
monitored in bores and water level.
Figures showing the water table and/or
potentiometric levels and principal flow
lines (map view and cross-section).
Tabulations and hydrographs of
groundwater level data.
Environmental Auditing
21
HYDROGEOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
(GROUNDWATER QUALITY) GUIDELINES
SECTION
TEXT CONTENT
SUPPORTING INFORMATION
Risk assessment
Impact assessment (source-pathway-receptor model):
discuss the possible and likely impacts on receptors
(beneficial uses) of groundwater by evaluating sources of
contamination and the potential for active pathways to exist
between the sources and receptors.
Discussion could include description of contaminant
release mechanism, transport and attenuation, reversibility
of attenuation reactions etc.
2
Section 53ZB (3) of the Environment Protection Act 1970 states that an environmental auditor appointed under the Act must
notify the Authority of any imminent environmental hazard as soon as is practicable after becoming aware of the hazard in the
course of conducting an environmental audit.
22
EPA Victoria
HYDROGEOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
(GROUNDWATER QUALITY) GUIDELINES
Reference list.
Notes:
1. This is suggested content for a typical detailed HA report. As the scope of the HA and therefore the report is dependent on the risk
presented to groundwater beneficial use, a detailed assessment that does not include all of these aspects may be sufficient.
2. A report arising from an HA desk study would follow the same format, but the level of data available will be less than for a HA that
includes field investigation.
3. The report for an HA that did not detect any contamination would not require detailed discussion of the groundwater contamination
assessment.
4. The report should be signed by the hydrogeologist responsible for the HA.
Environmental Auditing
23
HYDROGEOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
(GROUNDWATER QUALITY) GUIDELINES
Registered
bore ID
Site
bore
Drilled
depth
RL
natural
surface
RL measuring
point (top of
casing)
Screen
interval
Filter
pack
Annulus
(bentonite)
seal
(m)
(mAHD)
(mAHD)
(mbgl)
(mbgl)
(mbgl)
Aquifer
monitored
Development
method
Standing
water level
RWL
elevation
(30-May-2005)
(30-May-2005)
(mBTOC)
(mAHD)
S567745/01
BH1A
22-May-2005
7.5
67.50
67.80
4.57.5
4.07.5
3.54.0
BGA
6.00
61.80
S567745/02
BH1B
22-May-2005
15.0
67.50
67.90
12.015.0
11.5
15.0
11.011.5
BGA
6.35
61.55
S567745/03
BH2
23-May-2005
8.0
70.00
70.40
5.08.0
4.58.0
4.04.5
BGA
6.00
64.40
S567745/04
BH2
23-May-2005
9.5
73.00
73.55
6.59.5
6.06.5
5.56.0
BGA
Pump 15 mins
6.50
67.05
S567745/05
BH3
24-May-2005
20.0
78.77
79.22
17.020.0
16.5
20.0
16.016.5
FFA
Bail 25 mins
11.75
67.47
Notes:
BH1A and BH1B are different piezometers installed in bore BH1.
mAHD; metres Australian Height Datum.
RL: reduced level (m AHD)
mBTOC; metres below top of bore casing
24
EPA Victoria
HYDROGEOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
(GROUNDWATER QUALITY) GUIDELINES
EPA publication 669, Groundwater Sampling
APPENDIX C: USEFUL REFERENCES
Legislation
Environment Protection Act 1970, Victoria.
www.epa.vic.gov.au/land/
contaminated_land.asp
Subordinate legislation
All EPA guidelines and policies are available for download
from the EPA website: http://www.epa.vic.gov.au/
Criteria
ANZECC, 1992. Australian Water Quality
June 2003.
State Environment Protection Policy (Contaminated Land),
2002.
Guidelines
of Site Contamination.
Schedule B of the NEPM identifies 10 general guidelines
Standards
Environmental Auditing
25
HYDROGEOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
(GROUNDWATER QUALITY) GUIDELINES
General reference
EPA Victoria
Environmental Audit
Biodiversity Committee.
40 City Road
Southbank
Victoria 3006
Australia
www.epa.vic.gov.au
Association (ACLCA)
Resources, Victoria.
Leonard JG, 2003. Groundwater a vital renewable
resource. Chapter 17 in Geology of Victoria, Geological
Society of Australia Special Publication 23.
26
EPA Victoria