Crystalline basement aquifers of Ethiopia: Their genesis, classification and aquifer properties

Crystalline basement aquifers of Ethiopia: Their genesis, classification and aquifer properties

Author: 
Gaddissa Deyassa
Publisher: 
Elsevier
Date published: 
2014
Record type: 
Responsibility: 
Seifu Kebede, jt. author
Tenalem Ayenew, jt. author
Tesfaye Kidane, jt. author
Journal Title: 
Journal of African Earth Sciences
Source: 
Journal of African Earth Sciences, Vol 100, December 2014, pp. 191-202
Abstract: 

Basement rocks of Ethiopia were traditionally described as a system of regional aquiclude. Genesis of aquifers in basement rock is controlled by deep weathering and stripping processes. Groundwater occurrence in the basement rocks of Ethiopia is region specific. The weathering profiles and aquifer properties vary on regional and local scale. Three coherent zones are proposed for basement aquifers of Ethiopia. The crystalline basement rocks of Ethiopia were traditionally described as one system of regional aquiclude. This attribution was made disregarding variations in groundwater occurrence and potential which often times is promising in some geologic settings. Systematic studies addressing their genesis and spatial variations are lacking. Based on a thorough review of existing data and field observations, this work has shown that the genesis of basement aquifers is the result of complex interplay between the present/past climate and geomorphic processes which are tectonically controlled. It thus follows that the groundwater occurrence and the type of aquifer exhibit important contrasts on the surfaces of crystalline basement terrains of Ethiopia. Three coherent zones have been identified in this work based on their genesis, thickness of regolith, mechanisms of flow and storage properties: (a) in Western Ethiopia the aquifer is characterized by a vertical profile of fractured low to high grade bedrocks mantled by thick weathering profiles leading to high groundwater storage but low hydraulic conductance, (b) in Northern Ethiopia the weathered mantle is stripped to negligible thickness; groundwater occurs in high conducting but low storage fractured low grade bedrocks, (c) in the Borena lowlands (the southern basement region, the occurrence of groundwater is associated with wadi beds. The orientations of wadi beds follow regional fractures. These fractures control groundwater flow regime and enhance preferential weathering of bedrocks. The presence of alluvial sediments (mostly derived from gneiss and inselbergs of gneisses and granites) over the weathered mantle, facilitates infiltration into the weathered mantle and fractured bedrocks underneath. This enhances groundwater storage and movement both in the regolith and fractured bedrock. Elsewhere outside the wadi beds, duri crusts limit vertical recharge and groundwater availability to the bedrock; aquifers are of intermediate type with regard to hydraulic properties. Potential remnants of weathered mantle are still visible but contribute little to groundwater flow. It is therefore suggested here that more comprehension about groundwater in crystalline basement rocks of Ethiopia could be gained given the comparison is made based on the genesis of the aquifers as related to tectonics and climate induced stripping and deep weathering history.

Language: 

CITATION: Gaddissa Deyassa. Crystalline basement aquifers of Ethiopia: Their genesis, classification and aquifer properties . : Elsevier , 2014. Journal of African Earth Sciences, Vol 100, December 2014, pp. 191-202 - Available at: https://library.au.int/crystalline-basement-aquifers-ethiopia-their-genesis-classification-and-aquifer-properties