Aquifer Water-quality Assessment
July 1, 2008
Study will provide a better understanding of key sustainability issues
The
High Plains aquifer is a nationally important water resource that underlies
about 174,000 square miles in parts of eight western states. The aquifer serves
as the primary source of drinking water for most residents of the region, and
it also sustains more than one-fourth of the nation’s agricul-tural production.
Understanding water-quality conditions and the natural and human factors that
control water quality in this aquifer is important because of the implications
for human health, the sustainability of water supply and rural agricultural
economies, and the substantial costs associated with land and water management,
conservation and regulation.
During the 1980s, the U.S. Geological Survey’s (USGS) Regional Aquifer-System
Analysis (RASA) program char-acterized the hydrogeology of the High Plains
aquifer and developed numerical models of ground water flow to fore-cast changes
in water storage caused by pumping. That work established the benchmark for
water quantity and water supply in this important aquifer against which
regional changes could be compared, and the USGS continues to monitor the
amount of water stored in the aquifer. Information on the quality of water
within an aquifer system is complementary to understanding the quantity of
available water. It is the combination of water quantity and quality in an
aquifer that determines what uses the ground water resource can sustain. Prior
to this study, there had been no comprehensive assessment of water quality in
the aquifer that could serve as a baseline against which regional changes in
quality could be compared.
The USGS National Water-Quality Assessment (NAWQA) Program is designed to
provide a comprehensive assessment of the status, trends and factors
controlling water-quality conditions in the nation’s streams and aquifers. Full
implementation of the NAWQA Program began in 1991. During its first cycle of studies,
NAWQA delineated study-area boundaries primarily on the basis of surface-water
drainages. That approach was effective for assessing surface-water resources
and relatively small aquifers, but it was not necessarily suitable for
under-standing the water quality in regional aquifer systems that underlie
multiple surface-water drainages, such as the High Plains aquifer.
Understanding water-quality conditions in regional aquifer systems is
complicated by spatial variability in the controlling factors inherent in
regional studies and by temporal variability in recharge that may span
thousands of years. Studies designed to assess water quality in regional
aquifers need to account for that variability. In 1998, the NAWQA Program
selected the High Plains aquifer as a pilot for assessing water quality based
on a regional aquifer system approach. The effort is referred to as the High
Plains Regional Ground-Water (HPGW) study. The foundation for the HPGW study
was a 6-year, high-intensity phase of water-quality data collection that
occurred from 1999 to 2004.
The HPGW studies were designed to assess linkages between the quality of water
recharging the aqui-fer, the effect of transport through the hydrologic system
on water quality, and the quality of the used resource as represented by water
pumped from domestic, public-supply and irrigation wells. When these study
components are combined, they form what is known as a Source-Transport-Receptor
(STR) model for water-quality assessments. Within this model, studies were
designed to address the NAWQA goals of water-quality assessment and process
understanding. The process component included the study of critical processes
or factors of regional importance such as recharge, ground-water flow
directions and ages, and gradients in land use/land cover and climate that
helped to explain baseline conditions. A stratified, nested well network was
designed within the STR model. It facilitated up-scaling of monitoring
(assessment) results to unmonitored areas of the aquifer, as well as up-scaling
of process understanding from local to regional scales. ND
This article is provided through the courtesy of the U.S. Geological Survey,
and is excerpted from its professional paper, “Water-Quality Assessment of the
High Plains Aquifer.” The paper was written by Peter McMahon, Kevin Dennehy,
Breton Bruce, Jason Gurdak and Sharon Qi. To see the entire report, go to
www.usgs.gov.
|