DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION OF THE SCHEME
The layout of the scheme is shown on the map below.
It consists of an initial line of 17 interception bores, 90-125 metres deep and 27 kilometres of pipeline to convey
the intercepted saline groundwater to the Stockyard Plain disposal basin.
Electrically driven stainless steel pumps are installed 50 metres below river level, and draw saline groundwater from both
sides of the Murray, preventing it reaching the river. The total pumping capacity for the scheme is 21 ml/day.
The scheme was commissioned in December 1992.
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DISPOSAL BASIN
The basin, in a well defined natural depression 15km
southwest of Waikerie, is also being used to dispose of saline groundwater from the recently commissioned Woolpunda Salt Interception Scheme. It will eventually have a water spread of 680 hectares.
At the basin the saline water is disposed of by evaporation and by infiltration into the ground. The basin has a finite life,
but the impact of the salt infiltration should not become significant until after 400 years of pumping. If use of the basin is stopped after 100 years, the saline water will take approximately 50,000 years to return to the River.
Land around the basin was sheep grazing country. Since
stock was removed, natural revegetation is being encouraged. The basin has already attracted a healthy bird population, and there may be other recreational used to which the basin could be put.
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