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SPECIAL SECTION: UNDERSTANDING SUBSURFACE FLOW AND TRANSPORT PROCESSES AT THE IDAHO NATIONAL ENGINEERING & ENVIRONMENTAL LABORATORY (INEEL) SITE |
a Univ. of Waterloo, Earth Sciences Department, 200 University Ave. West, Waterloo, ON, Canada N2L 3G1
b Earth Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA 94720
c Earth and Environmental Sciences Division, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM 87545
Correspondence: * Corresponding author (aunger{at}scimail.uwaterloo.ca).
Received for publication 3 February 2003. The results of a series of ponded infiltration tests in variably saturated fractured basalt at Box Canyon, Idaho were used to build confidence in conceptual and numerical modeling approaches used to simulate infiltration in fractured rock. Specifically, we constructed a dual-permeability model using TOUGH2 to represent both the matrix and fracture continua of the upper basalt flow at the Box Canyon Site. A consistent set of hydrogeological parameters was obtained by calibrating the model to infiltration front arrival times in the fracture continuum as inferred from Br samples collected from fractureborehole intersections observed during the infiltrating tests. These parameters included the permeability of the fracture and matrix continua, the interfacial area between the fracture and matrix continua, and the porosity of the fracture continuum. To calibrate the model, we multiplied the fracturematrix interfacial area by a factor between 0.1 and 0.01 to reduce imbibition of water from the fracture continuum into the matrix continuum during the infiltration tests. Furthermore, the porosity of the fracture continuum, as calculated using the fracture aperture inferred from pneumatic-test permeabilities, was increased by a factor of 50 yielding porosity values for the upper basalt flow in the range of 0.01 to 0.02. The fracture-continuum porosity was a highly sensitive parameter controlling the arrival times of the simulated infiltration fronts. Porosity values are consistent with those determined during the Large-Scale Aquifer Pumping and Infiltration Test at the Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory.
Abbreviations: ER, electrical resistivity INEEL, Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory LPIT, Large-Scale Aquifer Pumping and Infiltration Test RMS, root mean square RWMC, Radioactive Waste Management Complex SDA, Subsurface Disposal Area TDR, time domain reflectometry 1-D, one-dimensional 3-D, three-dimensional
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