Long-term monitoring of surface-water dynamics in hyper-arid reservoir systems requires consistent remote-sensing methods that can distinguish open water from bright desert surfaces, shallow water, wet sand, and mixed shoreline pixels. This study evaluates Landsat-derived spectral water indices for delineating surface water in Lake Nasser and the adjacent Tushka Lakes, generates a multi-decadal record of surface-water extent using Google Earth Engine, and places the resulting surface-water patterns in the context of available hydrogeological observations. Landsat TM and OLI surface reflectance imagery was used to compare seven commonly applied water indices (NDWI, EWI, NDX, WRI, AWEInsh, TCW, and NWI) based on mapped water area, relative area differences, and classification accuracy metrics derived from 1000 stratified reference samples. Among the tested indices, NDWI provided stable water–land separation (overall accuracy ≈ 93.6%; κ ≈ 0.898) and was selected for long-term mapping. The NDWI-based workflow was implemented in Google Earth Engine to generate quarterly composites of surface-water extent for the period 1987–2026. The resulting time series reveals stable, persistent surface water in the central and southern sectors of Lake Nasser, in contrast to pronounced seasonal and interannual variability in the shallow, intermittently connected Tushka basins. Total mapped water area increased from 2631 km2 in 1987 to 8923 km2 in early 2026, with Lake Nasser ranging from 2411 to 6060.7 km2 and the Tushka Lakes expanding from no mapped water before 1998 to more than 3300 km2 during 2025. To assess possible surface–subsurface interaction, daily lake-stage records (1965–2014) and monthly groundwater levels from 44 observation wells were used to estimate potential seepage losses from Lake Nasser to the Nubian Sandstone Aquifer System using Darcy’s law. Annual seepage estimates ranged from 15.58 × 106 to 36.68 × 106 m3/year, suggesting spatial variability in potential lake–aquifer seepage along the western lake margin. The combined remote-sensing and hydrogeologic results provide complementary, non-causal evidence for interpreting where surface-water persistence and estimated seepage may co-occur. Because spatial correlation analysis, calibrated ground-water modeling, full water-budget analysis, and independent field validation were not performed, the inferred seepage–surface-water relation should be regarded as a cautious hypothesis rather than proof of causality.
El-Haddad et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
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