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New USGS groundwater studies explain what, when, and how contaminants
may reach public-supply wells.
All wells are not equally vulnerable to contamination because of
differences in three factors: the general chemistry of the aquifer,
groundwater age, and direct paths within aquifer systems that allow
water and contaminants to reach a well.
More than 100 million people in the United States receive their
drinking water from public groundwater systems, which can be vulnerable
to naturally occurring contaminants such as radon, uranium, arsenic, and
man-made compounds, including fertilizers, septic-tank leachate,
solvents and gasoline hydrocarbons.
The USGS tracked the movement of contaminants in groundwater and in
public-supply wells in four aquifers in California, Connecticut,
Nebraska and Florida. The importance of each factor differs among the
various aquifer settings, depending upon natural geology and local
aquifer conditions, as well as human activities related to land use and
well construction and operation. Findings in the four different aquifer
systems can be applied to similar aquifer settings and wells throughout
the nation.
Complete findings, fact sheets, maps and decision support tools
are
available.
“Our findings can help public-supply well managers protect drinking
water sources by prioritizing their monitoring programs and improving
decisions related to land use planning, well modifications or changes in
pumping scenarios that might help to reduce movement of contaminants to
wells,” said Sandra Eberts, USGS groundwater study team leader.
Research on the vulnerability of public-supply wells began in 2001.
The USGS has also been working since 1991 to study the occurrence of
more than 600 naturally occurring and man-made chemicals from more than
1,100 wells used for public supply across the nation. Scientists found
that chemicals are frequently detected, often in mixtures, but seldom at
concentrations likely to affect human health.
The quality of drinking water from the nation’s public-water systems
is regulated by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency under the Safe
Drinking Water Act. Related links to sources of information on
public-supply wells
are available. USGS studies are intended to
complement drinking water monitoring required by federal, state and
local programs, which focus primarily on post-treatment compliance
monitoring.
Highlights on the four studies:
In the Central Valley aquifer system near Modesto, Calif., the USGS
found that agricultural and urban development have enabled uranium to
move from sediments to water in the upper part of the aquifer. This
water can drain down the well when it is not pumping and enter the lower
aquifer. When pumping resumes, contaminant concentrations can be
temporarily elevated in water pumped from the well. As a result of USGS
findings, public-supply well managers have changed their pumping
schedule, which has reduced the amount of contaminated water pumped from
the well. Learn more about the California study.
In the glacial aquifer system in Woodbury, Conn., the USGS found that
the young age of the water throughout the aquifer makes it vulnerable to
contamination from man-made compounds. The USGS also found that dry
wells used in Woodbury to capture storm water runoff reroute the
potentially contaminated water directly into the aquifer used as a
drinking water source. This direct transfer prevents soil and
unsaturated sediments near the land surface from filtering out some of
the contaminants. Learn more about the Connecticut study.
In the High Plains aquifer near York, Neb., the USGS found some
contaminants in a public-supply well that seems protected by overlying
clay. Nearby irrigation wells have allowed water containing nitrate and
volatile organic compounds to leak down from an overlying shallow
aquifer into the aquifer that serves as the drinking water source for
the public-supply well. Learn more about the Nebraska study.
In the Floridan aquifer system near Tampa, Fla., the USGS found that
a large percentage of young water and contaminants from a shallow sand
aquifer travels quickly along natural conduits until it reaches a supply
well in a lower rock aquifer that serves as a drinking water source.
Because of these natural conduits, the supply well is vulnerable to the
man-made contaminants in the upper aquifer, and the mixing of waters
from the two aquifers has caused arsenic concentrations to increase in
water reaching the supply well.
Learn more about the Florida study.
Learn more about public-supply well contamination in a
USGS video
podcast
Contact:
Sandra Eberts, 614-430-7740
David Hebert, 571-423-9412 |