EGU22-13153, updated on 28 Mar 2022
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-13153
EGU General Assembly 2022
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Integration of multiple geoscientific investigation methods for a better understanding of a water system: the example of Chimborazo glaciers melting effects on the Chambo aquifer, Ecuador

Andrea Scozzari1, Paolo Catelan2, Francesco Chidichimo3, Michele de Biase3, Benito G. Mendoza Trujillo4, Pedro A. Carrettero Poblete4, and Salvatore Straface3
Andrea Scozzari et al.
  • 1CNR Institute of Information Science and Technologies (CNR-ISTI), Pisa, Italy (andrea.scozzari@isti.cnr.it)
  • 2Escuela Superior Politécnica del Chimborazo, Riobamba, Ecuador (paolocatelan@gmail.com)
  • 3Università della Calabria, Rende (CS), Italy (francesco.chidichimo@unical.it; micheledebiase27@gmail.com; salvatore.straface@unical.it)
  • 4Universidad Nacional de Chimborazo, Riobamba, Ecuador (bengui64@hotmail.com; pcarretero@unach.edu.ec)

The identification of the processes underlining natural systems often requires the adoption of multiple investigation techniques for the assessment of the sites under study. In this work, the combination of information derived from non-invasive sensing techniques, such as geophysics, remote sensing and hydrogeochemistry, highlights the possible influence of global climate change on the future water availability related to an aquifer in a peculiar glacier context, located in central Ecuador. In particular, we show that the Chambo aquifer, which supplies potable water to the region, does not contain fossil water, and it’s instead recharged over time. Indeed, the whole Chambo river basin is affected by the Chimborazo volcano, which is a glacerised mountain located in the inner tropics, one of the most critical places  to be observed in the frame of climate impact on water resources. Thanks to the infomation gathered by the various surveying techniques, numerical modelling permitted an estimate of the recharge, which can be fully originated by the runoff from Chimborazo melting glaciers. Actually, the retreat of the glaciers on top of the Chimborazo is an ongoing process presumably related to global climate change.

How to cite: Scozzari, A., Catelan, P., Chidichimo, F., de Biase, M., Mendoza Trujillo, B. G., Carrettero Poblete, P. A., and Straface, S.: Integration of multiple geoscientific investigation methods for a better understanding of a water system: the example of Chimborazo glaciers melting effects on the Chambo aquifer, Ecuador, EGU General Assembly 2022, Vienna, Austria, 23–27 May 2022, EGU22-13153, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-13153, 2022.