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Dive into the research topics where Eliot Chatton is active.

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Featured researches published by Eliot Chatton.


Science of The Total Environment | 2015

Origins and processes of groundwater salinization in the urban coastal aquifers of Recife (Pernambuco, Brazil): A multi-isotope approach

Lise Cary; Emmanuelle Petelet-Giraud; Guillaume Bertrand; Wolfram Kloppmann; Luc Aquilina; Veridiana Martins; Ricardo Hirata; Suzana Maria Gico Lima Montenegro; Hélène Pauwels; Eliot Chatton; Melissa Franzen; Axel Aurouet; Eric Lasseur; Géraldine Picot; Catherine Guerrot; Christine Fléhoc; Thierry Labasque; Jeane G. Santos; Anderson Luiz Ribeiro de Paiva; Gilles Braibant; Daniel Pierre

In the coastal multilayer aquifer system of a highly urbanized southern city (Recife, Brazil), where groundwaters are affected by salinization, a multi-isotope approach (Sr, B, O, H) was used to investigate the sources and processes of salinization. The high diversity of the geological bodies, built since the Atlantic opening during the Cretaceous, highly constrains the heterogeneity of the groundwater chemistry, e.g. Sr isotope ratios, and needs to be integrated to explain the salinization processes and groundwater pathways. A paleoseawater intrusion, most probably the 120 kyB.P. Pleistocene marine transgression, and cationic exchange are clearly evidenced in the most salinized parts of the Cabo and Beberibe aquifers. All (87)Sr/(86)Sr values are above the past and present-day seawater signatures, meaning that the Sr isotopic signature is altered due to additional Sr inputs from dilution with different freshwaters, and water-rock interactions. Only the Cabo aquifer presents a well-delimitated area of Na-HCO3 water typical of a freshening process. The two deep aquifers also display a broad range of B concentrations and B isotope ratios with values among the highest known to date (63-68.5‰). This suggests multiple sources and processes affecting B behavior, among which mixing with saline water, B sorption on clays and mixing with wastewater. The highly fractionated B isotopic values were explained by infiltration of relatively salty water with B interacting with clays, pointing out the major role played by (palaeo)-channels for the deep Beberibe aquifer recharge. Based on an increase of salinity at the end of the dry season, a present-day seawater intrusion is identified in the surficial Boa Viagem aquifer. Our conceptual model presents a comprehensive understanding of the major groundwater salinization pathways and processes, and should be of benefit for other southern Atlantic coastal aquifers to better address groundwater management issues.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Impact of climate changes during the last 5 million years on groundwater in basement aquifers

Luc Aquilina; Virginie Vergnaud-Ayraud; Antoine Armandine Les Landes; Hélène Pauwels; Philippe Davy; Emmanuelle Petelet-Giraud; Thierry Labasque; Clément Roques; Eliot Chatton; Olivier Bour; Sarah Ben Maamar; Alexis Dufresne; Mahmoud Khaska; Florent Barbecot

Climate change is thought to have major effects on groundwater resources. There is however a limited knowledge of the impacts of past climate changes such as warm or glacial periods on groundwater although marine or glacial fluids may have circulated in basements during these periods. Geochemical investigations of groundwater at shallow depth (80–400 m) in the Armorican basement (western France) revealed three major phases of evolution: (1) Mio-Pliocene transgressions led to marine water introduction in the whole rock porosity through density and then diffusion processes, (2) intensive and rapid recharge after the glacial maximum down to several hundred meters depths, (3) a present-day regime of groundwater circulation limited to shallow depth. This work identifies important constraints regarding the mechanisms responsible for both marine and glacial fluid migrations and their preservation within a basement. It defines the first clear time scales of these processes and thus provides a unique case for understanding the effects of climate changes on hydrogeology in basements. It reveals that glacial water is supplied in significant amounts to deep aquifers even in permafrosted zones. It also emphasizes the vulnerability of modern groundwater hydrosystems to climate change as groundwater active aquifers is restricted to shallow depths.


Science of The Total Environment | 2016

Glacial recharge, salinisation and anthropogenic contamination in the coastal aquifers of Recife (Brazil)

Eliot Chatton; Luc Aquilina; Emmanuelle Petelet-Giraud; Lise Cary; Guillaume Bertrand; Thierry Labasque; Ricardo Hirata; Vinicius Vicente Martins; Suzana Maria Gico Lima Montenegro; V. Vergnaud; Axel Aurouet; Wolfram Kloppmann; Pauwels

Implying large residence times and complex water origins deep coastal aquifers are of particular interest as they are remarkable markers of climate, water use and land use changes. Over the last decades, the Metropolitan Region of Recife (Brazil) went through extensive environmental changes increasing the pressure on water resources and giving rise to numerous environmental consequences on the coastal groundwater systems. We analysed the groundwater of the deep aquifers Cabo and Beberibe that are increasingly exploited. The processes potentially affecting groundwater residence times and flow paths have been studied using a multi-tracer approach (CFCs, SF6, noble gases, 14C, 2H and 18O). The main findings of these investigations show that: (1) Groundwaters of the Cabo and Beberibe aquifers have long residence times and were recharged about 20,000years ago. (2) Within these old groundwaters we can find palaeo-climate evidences from the last glacial period at the tropics with lower temperatures and dryer conditions than the present climate. (3) Recently, the natural slow dynamic of these groundwater systems was significantly affected by mixing processes with contaminated modern groundwater coming from the shallow unconfined Boa Viagem aquifer. (4) The large exploitation of these aquifers leads to a modification of the flow directions and causes the intrusion through palaeo-channels of saline water probably coming from the Capibaribe River and from the last transgression episodes. These observations indicate that the current exploitation of the Cabo and Beberibe aquifers is unsustainable regarding the long renewal times of these groundwater systems as well as their ongoing contamination and salinisation. The groundwater cycle being much slower than the human development rhythm, it is essential to integrate the magnitude and rapidity of anthropogenic impacts on this extremely slow cycle to the water management concepts.


Journal of Contaminant Hydrology | 2016

Groundwater contamination in coastal urban areas: Anthropogenic pressure and natural attenuation processes. Example of Recife (PE State, NE Brazil)

Guillaume Bertrand; Ricardo Hirata; Hélène Pauwels; Lise Cary; E. Petelet-Giraud; Eliot Chatton; Luc Aquilina; Thierry Labasque; Vinicius Vicente Martins; S. Montenegro; J. Batista; A. Aurouet; J. Santos; R. Bertolo; Géraldine Picot; M. Franzen; R. Hochreutener; Gilles Braibant

In a context of increasing land use pressure (over-exploitation, surface-water contamination) and repeated droughts, identifying the processes affecting groundwater quality in coastal megacities of the tropical and arid countries will condition their long-term social and environmental sustainability. The present study focuses on the Brazilian Recife Metropolitan Region (RMR), which is a highly urbanized area (3,743,854 inhabitants in 2010) on the Atlantic coast located next to an estuarial zone and overlying a multi-layered sedimentary system featured by a variable sediment texture and organic content. It investigates the contamination and redox status patterns conditioning potential attenuation within the shallow aquifers that constitute the interface between the city and the strategic deeper semi-confined aquifers. These latter are increasingly exploited, leading to high drawdown in potenciometric levels of 20-30m and up to 70m in some high well density places, and potentially connected to the surface through leakage. From a multi-tracer approach (major ions, major gases, δ(11)B, δ(18)O-SO4, δ(34)S-SO4) carried out during two field campaigns in September 2012 and March 2013 (sampling of 19 wells and 3 surface waters), it has been possible to assess the contamination sources and the redox processes. The increasing trend for mineralization from inland to coastal and estuarial wells (from 119 to around 10,000μS/cm) is at first attributed to water-rock interactions combined with natural and human-induced potentiometric gradients. Secondly, along with this trend, one finds an environmental pressure gradient related to sewage and/or surface-channel network impacts (typically depleted δ(11)B within the range of 10-15‰) that are purveyors of chloride, nitrate, ammonium and sulfate. Nitrate, ammonium and sulfate (ranging from 0 to 1.70mmol/L, from 0 to 0,65mmol/L, from 0.03 to 3.91mmol/L respectively are also potentially produced or consumed through various redox processes (pyrite oxidation, denitrification, dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium) within the system, as is apparent within a patchwork of biogeochemical reactors. Furthermore, intensive pumping in the coastal area with its high well density punctually leads to temporary well salinization ([Cl] reaching temporarily 79mmol/L). Our results, summarized as a conceptual scheme based on environmental conditions, is a suitable basis for implementing sustainable management in coastal sedimentary hydrosystems influenced by highly urbanized conditions.


Science of The Total Environment | 2018

Multi-layered water resources, management, and uses under the impacts of global changes in a southern coastal metropolis: When will it be already too late? Crossed analysis in Recife, NE Brazil

Emmanuelle Petelet-Giraud; Lise Cary; Paul Cary; Guillaume Bertrand; Armelle Giglio-Jacquemot; Ricardo Hirata; Luc Aquilina; Lincoln M. Alves; Veridiana Martins; Ana Maria Melo; Suzana Maria Gico Lima Montenegro; Eliot Chatton; Melissa Franzen; Axel Aurouet

Coastal water resources are a worldwide key socio-environmental issue considering the increasing concentration of population in these areas. Here, we propose an integrative transdisciplinary approach of water resource, water management and water access in Recife (NE Brazil). The present-day water situation is conceptualized as an imbricated multi-layered system: a multi-layered water resource, managed by a multi-layered governance system and used by a multi-layered social population. This allows identifying processes of quantitative, qualitative, and sanitary conflicts between governance and population strategies regarding water supply, as well as the institutional and individual denials of these conflicts. Based on this model, we anticipate future water-related problematic fates. Concerning the water resource system, the rapid groundwater level decrease due to unsustainable water predatory strategies, and the very low recharge rate have drastically modified the aquifer system functioning, inducing hydraulic connection between shallow groundwater (contaminated and locally salty) and deep ones (mostly fresh, with local inherited salinity), threatening the deep strategic water resource. Concerning the water governance system, the investments to increase the capacity storage of surface water, the water regulation agencies and the public/private partnership should shortly improve the water supply and wastewater issue. Nevertheless, the water situation will remain highly fragile due to the expected water demand increase, the precipitation decrease and the sea-level increase. Concerning the water access system, the population variably perceives these current and further effects and the possible mitigation policies, and develops alternative individual strategies. Authorities, policymakers and water managers will have to implement a well-balanced water governance, taking into account the specificities of the PPP, public and private groundwater users, and with a strong political willingness for a sustainable water management to ensure water supply for all the population. In other words, an anticipatory and integrated vision is necessary to reduce the discrepancies in this complex system.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2017

Field Continuous Measurement of Dissolved Gases with a CF-MIMS: Applications to the Physics and Biogeochemistry of Groundwater Flow

Eliot Chatton; Thierry Labasque; Jérôme Bondet de La Bernardie; Nicolas Guihéneuf; Olivier Bour; Luc Aquilina

In the perspective of a temporal and spatial exploration of aquatic environments (surface and groundwater), we developed a technique for field continuous measurements of dissolved gases with a precision better than 1% for N2, O2, CO2, He, Ar, 2% for Kr, 8% for Xe, and 3% for CH4, N2O and Ne. With a large resolution (from 1 × 10-9 to 1 × 10-2 ccSTP/g) and a capability of high frequency analysis (1 measure every 2 s), the CF-MIMS (Continuous Flow Membrane Inlet Mass Spectrometer) is an innovative tool allowing the investigation of a large panel of hydrological and biogeochemical processes in aquatic systems. Based on the available MIMS technology, this study introduces the development of the CF-MIMS (conception for field experiments, membrane choices, ionization) and an original calibration procedure allowing the quantification of mass spectral overlaps and temperature effects on membrane permeability. This study also presents two field applications of the CF-MIMS involving the well-logging of dissolved gases and the implementation of groundwater tracer tests with dissolved 4He. The results demonstrate the analytical capabilities of the CF-MIMS in the field. Therefore, the CF-MIMS is a valuable tool for the field characterization of biogeochemical reactivity, aquifer transport properties, groundwater recharge, groundwater residence time and aquifer-river exchanges from few hours to several weeks experiments.


Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 2017

Groundwater isotopic data as potential proxy for Holocene paleohydroclimatic and paleoecological models in NE Brazil

Guillaume Bertrand; Ricardo Hirata; Augusto S. Auler; Francisco W. Cruz; Lise Cary; Emmanuelle Petelet-Giraud; Eliot Chatton; Luc Aquilina; Jean-Sébastien Moquet; Maria Gracia Bustamante; Christian Millo; Veridiana Martins; Suzanna Montenegro; Hélène Celle-Jeanton


The EGU General Assembly | 2015

Assessment of natural dynamics and anthropogenic impacts on residence times in the urban aquifers of Recife (Brazil) using a multi- tracer approach (noble gases, CFCs, SF6, 14C)

Eliot Chatton; Thierry Labasque; Luc Aquilina; Emmanuelle Petelet-Giraud; Lise Cary; Guillaume Bertrand; Rebecca Hochreutener


Archive | 2018

Chapitre 2. La qualité et l’âge des eaux souterraines de la Région Métropolitaine de Recife

Lise Cary; Emmanuelle Petelet-Giraud; Eliot Chatton; Guillaume Bertrand; Luc Aquilina; Thierry Labasque


Journal of Hydrology | 2018

Recharge processes and vertical transfer investigated through long-term monitoring of dissolved gases in shallow groundwater

V. de Montety; Luc Aquilina; Thierry Labasque; Eliot Chatton; Ophélie Fovet; Laurent Ruiz; E. Fourre; J.-R. de Dreuzy

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Luc Aquilina

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Ricardo Hirata

University of São Paulo

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Jérôme Bondet de La Bernardie

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Guillaume Bertrand

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Guillaume Bertrand

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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