Groundwater skimming
Seawater
intrusion occurs in the interface between GW and seawater. The density of seawater
is higher than the fresh GW that allows seawater to push the GW. Due to excessive
use of GW for industry, agriculture (especially rice cultivation), shrimp
farming, and fisheries, saline seawater may intrude into the GW table. The
wells with saline GW in the coastal region impedes its use as drinking water.
Groundwater skimming is a technique that extracts relatively fresh GW from the
upper zone of the fresh-saline aquifer (known as Dhorugu technology). Skimming
wells play an important role in supply good quality drinking water, irrigation water
and control the GW table to prevent its further degradation. The conventional
single strainer well, multi-strainers wells, scavenger wells, radial collector
wells, and dug wells are various types of skimming wells.