O Dochartaigh, B.. 2003 Explanatory notes to accompany the Groundwater Vulnerability Index GIS for Glasgow City Council. Edinburgh, UK, British Geological Survey, 16pp. (CR/03/204N) (Unpublished)
Abstract
These notes are designed to accompany the ArcView geographical information system (GIS)
format groundwater vulnerability index map produced by the British Geological Survey (BGS)
for Glasgow City Council. The map is based on digital geological information for both bedrock
and superficial deposits. It covers the whole of the Glasgow City Council area plus a ‘buffer
zone’ to account for peripheral data.
The purpose of the GIS map is to indicate, in broad terms, the vulnerability of groundwater to
pollution. Groundwater is contained within aquifers of various types. Abstraction from these
aquifers provides water for potable supplies and various domestic, industrial and agricultural
uses. Some highly permeable aquifers are very productive and of regional importance as sources
for public water supply; other, less permeable formations, are of local importance for domestic,
agricultural and industrial supplies. Groundwater also provides the baseflow to surface
watercourses. Groundwater is typically of high quality and often requires little or no treatment
before use. However, it is vulnerable to contamination from both diffuse and point source
pollutants, from direct discharges into groundwater and indirect discharges into and onto land.
Aquifer remediation is difficult, prolonged and expensive: therefore, the prevention of pollution
is important.
The approach and classifications used in the production of the groundwater vulnerability index
can also be used in the assessment of specific land use practices, proposed developments and
land use changes over aquifers where these could have an impact on groundwater quality. More
detailed site specific assessment of vulnerability will be required where it is considered that
development may have an impact on groundwater quality.
This GIS and printed maps are a compromise between the representation of natural complexity
and the simplicity of interpretation at a scale of 1:50,000. This places limitations on the
resolution and precision of map information. There is a wide variety of geological strata and
potential pollutants, and the vulnerability index classification is, of necessity, generalised.
Individual sites and circumstances will always require further and more detailed assessment to
determine the specific impact on groundwater resources. The map coverages in the GIS only
represent geological conditions (bedrock or superficial) as mapped at their upper surface. Where
these formations have been disturbed or removed, for example, during mineral extraction or
where worked ground exists in urban areas, the actual vulnerability of groundwater may be
altered from natural conditions. Hence, where there is evidence of ground disturbance, sitespecific data should be collected and used to determine the vulnerability of groundwater. The overall permeability of each geological unit has been interpreted to produce an index of the
vulnerability of groundwater occurring in Glasgow, and provides a broad-based view of both the
vulnerability of groundwater and the location of the more permeable aquifers in Glasgow.
The data used to interpret the groundwater vulnerability index are derived from the 1:50 000
DigMap bedrock and superficial geology coverage. The GIS and associated maps should not
therefore be used at scales larger than 1:50 000. Locations of thick clays have been interpreted
and drawn based on BGS borehole records. Information on water boreholes is derived from the
British Geological Survey Scottish Water Borehole database.
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