WHERE RECHARGING METEORIC WATER MEETS SEAWATER AND BASINAL BRINE: THE CONVERGENCE OF HYDROPRESSURED AND GEOPRESSURED ZONES BENEATH THE CENTRAL TEXAS GULF COASTAL PLAIN
Chemical composition of groundwater suggests mixing of three waters in the convergence zone: recently recharged meteoric water moving downdip from the outcrop, brine moving updip from the geopressured zone, and connate seawater in the deep part of the hydropressured zone. Extensional faulting near the outcrop in central Texas restricts the net downdip flux of recharge; the convergence zone is closer to the outcrop downdip of the fault zone than in south or northeast Texas. A MODFLOW model, developed for assessing water resources, was assigned a general-head boundary at the updip limit of the geopressured zone. A small simulated updip flux of basinal brine, given the constraints of assuming uniform fluid density, gives a reasonable match of the plan-view hydraulic-head gradient reversal and a rough estimate of vertical cross-formational flow in the convergence zone.