Australian Natural Resources Atlas

Groundwater Management Unit

 

Location map of Mid and Upper Murrumbidgee Catchment Fractured

Groundwater Management Unit: Mid and Upper Murrumbidgee Catchment Fractured

Introduction

The groundwater resource characteristics for the Mid and Upper Murrumbidgee Catchment Fractured groundwater managment unit are presented below. This includes technical detail on aquifer properties and water level change for key monitoring bores.

What is the character of Mid and Upper Murrumbidgee Catchment Fractured's groundwater resource?

Vital Statistics:

Area592 km2
Total Water Allocated1,577 ML/yr
Total Water Used1,723 ML/yr
Average Salinity500 mg/L
Sustainable Yield6,000 ML/yr
Depth to top of aquifer10 m

Aquifer Description:

The main fractured rock aquifers within the areas presently included within the tentative boundary of the GMU are palaeozooic metasedimentary rocks and Silurian volcanic rocks, with the latter tending to have a slightly lower salinity range. A weathered near- surface zone which is dominated by clayey products of rock weathering has been developed extensively in the area, and where present it commonly acts as a confining layer for the aquifers in the deeper and less weathered rocks. Within the Tertiary valley-fill deposits south of Lake George, the shallowest aquifer is essentially unconfined but the deeper aquifers are at least partially confined by the shallower clay layers.

Method used for determining sustainable yield:

One of the most basic pieces of data required for sensible management of a resource is the quantity of input to a system or recharge. The sustainable yield of an aquifer is almost always considerably less than recharge because of the provision for the environmental needs. Nevertheless, any sustainable yield study will always involve the determination of recharge as a first necessary step. The following working definition has been adopted: SUSTAINABLE YIELD IS THAT PROPORTION OF THE LONG TERM AVERAGE ANNUAL RECHARGE WHICH CAN BE EXTRACTED EACH YEAR WITHOUT CAUSING UNACCEPTABLE IMPACTS ON THE ENVIRONMENT OR OTHER GROUNDWATER USERS The actual proportion is not specified in this definition. This proportion will change according to each situation and is assigned differently to each aquifer system. An interim sustainable yield figure has been derived for NSW aquifers by applying a sustainability factor to estimated recharge. These sustainability factors are a proportion of long term annual average recharge. An arbitrary default factor of 70% (ie 30% of recharge is reserved for environmental needs) has been adopted for most cases to date, but as better understanding of groundwater systems is developed, the sustainable yields can be adjusted accordingly. The initial figures are intended to be conservative while bearing in mind that it is most often easier to subsequently adjust Sustainable yield values upward rather than downward. Sustainability factors offer protection to the integrity of the groundwater system itself and ultimately all groundwater users including the environment and ensure that neither temporary nor permanent damage to the aquifer system results from overuse. Sustainable yield values can - and indeed will - change over time as our technical understanding of the dynamics of individual groundwater systems is enhanced as a result of more rigorous investigation and in response to changes in natural and socio-economic realities. In short, this is a commencement of a continuous process of periodic review and adjustment of sustainable yield estimates. It follows therefore that a set of sustainable yield figures will reflect a level of understanding that exists at a point in time. Groundwater management committees may change the sustainable yield factor to suit local conditions. High levels of accuracy in determining sustainable yield require a degree of rigorous study that would take years if not decades to achieve. As many NSW systems are either over- allocated or nearly so, it is not practical nor is it in the communitys best interests to wait those decades before adopting allocation ceilings that are technically highly accurate. In short, at this stage a very high degree of accuracy is not required to commence management consistent with the philosophy of sustainability. Nevertheless, the approach applied has generated a set of figures that have been produced as a synthesis of knowledge accumulated to the present and have been adjusted according to good hydrogeological common sense and an understanding of local issues. Additionally, the approach has been conservative in the interest of resource protection but tempered with compromise recognising the need to preserve current development and acknowledging the importance of encouraging continued development where appropriate to do so. Where rigorous numerical models have been developed and have resulted in the generation of acceptable recharge figures for an aquifer system, these values have been adopted as acceptable for use in sustainable yield determinations. In some cases systems that are similar to a modelled system have had recharge determined empirically using the modelled system as a reference. Most systems however, have not been modelled. In those cases, inputs (or recharge) to the system have generally been kept to rainfall and river components of recharge. Throughflow and underflow have in most cases been omitted from calculations in the interest of both simplicity and conservatism. Likewise, irrigation returns have not been considered even though in some situations, a certain proportion of irrigated water might be expected to access the underlying aquifer. Two equations were used to estimate recharge. Both have a limited number of terms and allow recharge values to be assigned respectively to:

  1. Rainfall sourced and;
  2. River sourced.

Rainfall recharge was calculated according to assessed rainfall, area and assumed proportion of rainfall accessing the aquifer. River recharge was estimated using an equation, which is a modified form of the Darcy equation that is used in the assessment of river recharge in the Modflow software package that models groundwater flow. The result is a theoretical contribution of the river to the recharge. An additional factor was applied to this result as an adjustment factor intended to reduce the theoretical river recharge and is set as a) the fraction of the year and/or b). fraction of river reach - that is considered as a loosing stream. In this way an actual river recharge component is produced. There is a strong subjective character to the results achieved by the above method which has been applied to all GMUs across NSW, but they have been made with common sense and with hydrogeological principles in mind. They are therefore valid within the needs of the present situation.

For this GMU, a preliminary estimate of sustainable yield has been derived by assuming long term average annual recharge is 2% of rainfall, and allowing a 30% environmental factor (ie sustainable yield is 70% of recharge).

Assumptions used for allocating development categories:

The classification as Category 2 for allocation and abstraction is based on a preliminary estimate of sustainable yield, recorded data for allocations and on estimates by regional staff for usage. The classification is not likely to change with more precise data, however, unless there is a significant amount of unlicensed use for irrigation.

Are groundwater levels changing?

Technical information on the key groundwater bores and monitoring stations is presented below, including hydrographs where available. Link to a discussion on groundwater levels and trends at a State level as it relates to dryland salinity.

Bore IDStart recordEnd recordDepth of bore (m)Reduced level (m)
NSWGW025270/101-Jan-9501-Jan-0026no data
NSWGW025270/201-Jan-9501-Jan-0032no data
NSWGW03906601-Jan-9201-Jan-9765254
NSWGW06595701-Jan-9401-Jan-9761no data
NSWGW06602601-Jan-9401-Jan-9847no data

The following groundwater management units also occur in Lachlan Province:

Further information

Key

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