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Dive into the research topics where Sébastien Santoni is active.

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Featured researches published by Sébastien Santoni.


Science of The Total Environment | 2016

Strontium isotopes as tracers of water-rocks interactions, mixing processes and residence time indicator of groundwater within the granite-carbonate coastal aquifer of Bonifacio (Corsica, France)

Sébastien Santoni; Frederic Huneau; Emilie Garel; Luc Aquilina; Virginie Vergnaud-Ayraud; Thierry Labasque; H. Celle-Jeanton

This study aims at identifying the water-rock interactions and mixing rates within a complex granite-carbonate coastal aquifer under high touristic pressure. Investigations have been carried out within the coastal aquifer of Bonifacio (southern Corsica, France) mainly composed of continental granitic weathering products and marine calcarenite sediments filling a granitic depression. A multi-tracer approach combining physico-chemical parameters, major ions, selected trace elements, stable isotopes of the water molecule and 87Sr/86Sr ratios measurements is undertaken for 20 groundwater samples during the low water period in November 2014. 5 rock samples of the sedimentary deposits and surrounding granites are also analysed. First, the water-rock interactions processes governing the groundwater mineralization are described in order to fix the hydrogeochemical background. Secondly, the flow conditions are refined through the quantification of inter aquifer levels mixing, and thirdly, the kinetics of water-rock interaction based on groundwater residence time from a previous study using CFCs and SF6 are quantified for the two main flow lines. A regional contrast in the groundwater recharge altitude allowed the oxygene-18 to be useful combined with the 87Sr/86Sr ratios to differentiate the groundwater origins and to compute the mixing rates, revealing the real extension of the watershed and the availability of the resource. The results also highlight a very good correlation between the groundwater residence time and the spatial evolution of 87Sr/86Sr ratios, allowing water-rock interaction kinetics to be defined empirically for the two main flow lines through the calcarenites. These results demonstrate the efficiency of strontium isotopes as tracers of water-rock interaction kinetics and by extension their relevance as a proxy of groundwater residence time, fundamental parameter documenting the long term sustainability of the hydrosystem.


Science of The Total Environment | 2018

Delayed nitrate dispersion within a coastal aquifer provides constraints on land-use evolution and nitrate contamination in the past

Mélanie Erostate; Frederic Huneau; Emilie Garel; Moritz F. Lehmann; Thomas Kuhn; Luc Aquilina; Virginie Vergnaud-Ayraud; Thierry Labasque; Sébastien Santoni; Samuel Robert; D. Provitolo; Vanina Pasqualini

Identifying sources of anthropogenic pollution, and assessing the fate and residence time of pollutants in aquifers is important for the management of groundwater resources, and the ecological health of groundwater dependent ecosystems. This study investigates anthropogenic contamination in the shallow alluvial aquifer of the Marana-Casinca, hydraulically connected to the Biguglia lagoon (Corsica, France). A multi-tracer approach, combining geochemical and environmental isotopic data (δ18O-H2O, δ2H-H2O, 3H, δ15N-NO3-, δ18O-NO3-, δ11B), and groundwater residence-time tracers (3H and CFCs) was carried out in 2016, and integrated with a study of land use evolution in the catchment during the last century. Groundwater NO3- concentrations, ranged between 2 mg/L and up to 30 mg/L, displaying the degradation of groundwater quality induced by anthropogenic activities (agricultural activities). Comparatively high δ15N-NO3- values (up to 19.7‰) in combination with δ11B values that were significantly lower (between 23‰ and 26‰) than the seawater background are indicative of sewage contamination. The ongoing deterioration of groundwater quality can be attributed to the uncontrolled urbanization development all over the alluvial plain, with numerous sewage leakages from the sanitation network and private sewage systems. Integration of contaminant and water-residence time data revealed a progressive accumulation of pollutants with time in the groundwater, particularly in areas with major anthropogenic pressure and slow dynamic groundwater flow. Our approach provides time-dependent insight into nitrogen pollution in the studied aquifer over the past decades, revealing a systematic change in the dominant NO3- source, from agricultural to sewage contamination. Yet, todays low groundwater quality is to large parts due to legacy pollution from land-use practices several decades ago, underlining the poor self-remediating capacity of this hydrosystem. Our results can be taken as warning that groundwater pollution that happened in the recent past, or today, may have dire impacts on the quality of groundwater-dependent ecosystems in the future.


Archive | 2018

Multi-tracers Strategy to Define a Conceptual Model for the Coastal Aquifers of Mediterranean Islands, Case Study of the Bonifacio Aquifer (Corsica, France)

Sébastien Santoni; Emilie Garel; Frederic Huneau

A hydrochemical and multi-isotope study was conducted to identify the flow paths, the recharge areas and the geochemical processes governing the evolution of groundwater in the Mediterranean carbonate coastal aquifer of Bonifacio (Corsica). The study is aimed at improving the hydrogeological conceptual model based on environmental tracer investigation tools to characterise and quantify the complex aquifer system. Hydrogeochemical parameters and isotope (δ2H, δ18O, 3H) surveys of rainwater and groundwater have been carried out monthly during two years. A local meteoric water line has been defined and marine, terrestrial and anthropogenic influences on the recharge water hydrochemistry have been described. Preferential recharge during autumn/winter of rainfall is observed and depletion in the isotopic signature for some groundwater samples suggests a recharge at higher altitude from the surrounding granites. A modification of the input signal during infiltration through the unsaturated zone appears and the groundwater hydrochemistry displays differential variation in time and space, with the presence of inertial water bodies in the lower aquifer mainly. Dissolved anthropogenic gases CFCs and SF6 were used to evaluate groundwater residence time. CFCs have been relevant despite the presence of a deep unsaturated zone and the computed rate of groundwater renewal is pluriannual to multi-decadal. Natural SF6 was found in granites and has been used as a direct tracer of groundwater origin, highlighting its role in the aquifer lateral recharge. Strontium isotopes (87Sr/86Sr) were used to improve the knowledge on groundwater mineralization and mixing processes, and are relevant to confirm and quantify the granitic contribution to the aquifer recharge. To improve the quantification of the aquifer water balance terms, submarine groundwater discharges were also studied using aerial infrared images in conjunction with Radon and Radium isotopes (222Rn, 223,224Ra).


Ground Water | 2018

An Analytical Method for Assessing Recharge Using Groundwater Travel Time in Dupuit-Forchheimer Aquifers: R. Chesnaux et al. Groundwater x, no. x: x-xx

R. Chesnaux; Sébastien Santoni; Emilie Garel; Frederic Huneau

An analytical solution to calculate the recharge of unconfined aquifers with Dupuit-Forchheimer type flow conditions is proposed. This solution is derived from an existing closed-form analytical solution initially developed to determine groundwater travel time when the recharge of the aquifer is known. This existing solution has been modified to determine recharge when groundwater travel time is known. An illustration is given with a field case example for the Bonifacio aquifer of the island of Corsica (France), in the Mediterranean. In this aquifer, previously established differences in groundwater residence time between two water samples were determined from anthropogenic atmospheric gas (chlorofluorocarbons and sulfur hexafluoride) measurements. The time difference is entered into the new analytical solution to determine recharge. The calculations yield a value of average recharge that agrees with the results obtained by several other methods that were presented in previous studies to assess the recharge of the Bonifacio aquifer. Also presented in this study is a sensitivity analysis of the new analytical solution, to quantify the influence of different parameters that control recharge: hydraulic conductivity, effective porosity and the groundwater travel time. This study illustrates how geochemical data can be combined with physical models to measure recharge. Such an approach could be adopted in other homogeneous aquifers worldwide that satisfy Dupuit-Forchheimer type flow conditions.


Journal of Hydrology | 2016

Residence time, mineralization processes and groundwater origin within a carbonate coastal aquifer with a thick unsaturated zone

Sébastien Santoni; Frederic Huneau; Emilie Garel; Virginie Vergnaud-Ayraud; Thierry Labasque; Luc Aquilina; Jessy Jaunat; H. Celle-Jeanton


Journal of Hydrology | 2018

Multiple recharge processes to heterogeneous Mediterranean coastal aquifers and implications on recharge rates evolution in time

Sébastien Santoni; Frederic Huneau; Emilie Garel; Hélène Celle-Jeanton


Géologues | 2016

Quels outils pour la reconnaissance des potentialités aquifères des zones côtières sous forte pression anthropique ? Vers une mise en exploitationdurable des ressources du plateau carbonaté de Bonifacio

Sébastien Santoni; Frederic Huneau; Emilie Garel; Luc Aquilina; Thierry Labasque; Virginie Vergnaud-Ayraud


International Symposium on Isotope Hydrology, Revisiting Foundations and Exploring Frontiers, IAEA, Vienna, Austria, 11-15 May 2015 | 2015

A radium and radon tracing experiment to estimate low submarine groundwater discharge (aquifer of Bonifacio, Corsica, France)

Emilie Garel; Sébastien Santoni; Frederic Huneau; Adriano Mayer; Yves Travi; Olivier Radakovitch; Sabine Cockenpot; Christelle Claude


42nd IAH International Congress "Hydrogeology: back to the Future!", 13-18 September 2015, Rome, Italy | 2015

Anthropogenic influence on the groundwater dependent ecosystem of the Biguglia lagoon (Corsica, France)

Emilie Garel; Frederic Huneau; Jessy Jaunat; Alain Devos; Olivier Lejeune; Hélène Celle-Jeanton; C Luccioni; Sébastien Santoni


Archive | 2018

An analytical method for assessing recharge using groundwater travel time in Dupuit-Forchheimer aquifers

Romain Chesnaux; Sébastien Santoni; Emilie Garel; Frederic Huneau

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Emilie Garel

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Frederic Huneau

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Luc Aquilina

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Virginie Vergnaud-Ayraud

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Hélène Celle-Jeanton

University of Clermont-Ferrand

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Olivier Radakovitch

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Alain Devos

University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne

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