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Chandrashekar, Hanumanthaiah
plane country. The western portion of Taluk is jungly and marketed by continues hills. The atmosphere is neither
very humid nor dry. The Annual precipitation of this region is 890mm.
Anekal Taluk has a typical hydrogeolocic setting. The entire Taluk comprise of mainly Granitic gneiss belonging to
pre-Cambrian age. The granetic gneiss is exposed as a continuous chain of mounds raising from 300 to 500 feet
above ground level. The depth of weathering is gentle. The central and eastern portions of taluk show maximum
thickness of weathered mantle.
The population mainly depends on agriculture for their subsistence. The farming is mainly dry farming, as Taluk has
not got any big rivers. Irrigation is mainly carried out by means of tanks and wells. The principle dry crops are ragi
and gram. The wet crops consist of paddy, sugarcane and jowar. In addition to other crops arreca, betlevine,
coconut, grapes, banana sugarcane, ground nut, vegetables etc., are also raised to some extent mulberry cultivation is
also seen here and these.
DRASTIC METHDOLOGY:
DRASTIC - DRASTIC is a ground water pollution vulnerability assessment spatial deterministic model.
DRASTIC uses a set if seven hydrogeologic key parameters to classify the vulnerability or pollution potential of an
aquifer. The parameters are weighed with respect to their relative importance to the pollution potential of the
aquifer. The DRASTIC parameters are
The Impact of vadose zone
€ The Depth to ground water
€ The Recharge due to rainfall
9 The Aquifer media
® The Soil media
€ The Topography
®
®
The hydraulic conductivity
DRASTIC INDEX (DI) = Dg Dy * Rag Rw +Ar Aw + Sp Sy *Tg Tw +Ir Iw + Cr Cv
R refers to rating of the parameter ranges and W refers to the weighting of the parameter. Rating varying from 1 to
10, are intended to reflect the relative significance of classes with in each factor. The weightages and rating for
various DRASTIC parameters is given in Table (1 to 7)
Depth to water is an important primary data, which determines the depth of material through which a contaminant
must travel before reaching the Aquifer. The published reports of department of mines and geology are used for
finding depth to water in the study area. Recharge is defined as the total quantity of water, which is applied on the
ground surface. Recharged water is the principle vehicle for leaching and transporting solid and liquid contaminants
to water table. The rainfall data of fixed rain gauge stations with sixteen years of observations has used. The
recharge value polygons are obtained using revised norms of ground water estimation committee report. Aquifer
media refers to the consolidated or unconsolidated rock, which serves as storage of water. In preparation of
polygonal unit of aquifer media satellite remote sensing derived hydrogeomorphological maps and geological maps
are used. The soil map from NBLUSS centre Bangalore was enlarged to 1:50,000 scale the soil units represented on
maps are suitably combined into various textural unit polygons representing varied ability of a contaminant to move
vertically into vadose zone. Topography refers to Slope and slope variability of the land surface. The slope map is
derived using SOI top sheets. The impact vadose zone in complex phenomena combining aquifer media and
topography characteristics. Hydraulic conductivity refers to the ability of the aquifer material to transmit water. The
hydraulic conductivity values are calculated after calculating transmistivity from pumping test data. The weightages
are assigned using, US EPA (works of Aller) for all the DRASTIC parameters.
Suitable modification are done in assigning ranges depending on the parameter values in hydrogeologic setting for
Anekal Taluk.
International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXIII, Part B7. Amsterdam 2000. 259