H11D-0901:
Assessing the Nation’s Brackish Groundwater Resources

Monday, 15 December 2014
Jennifer Stanton1, David William Anning2, Richard B Moore3, Peter B McMahon4, John Karl Bohlke5 and Virginia Lea McGuire1, (1)USGS Nebraska Water Science Center, Lincoln, NE, United States, (2)USGS Arizona Water Science Center, Tucson, AZ, United States, (3)U.S. Geological Survey, Pembroke, NH, United States, (4)U.S. Geological Survey, Lakewood, CO, United States, (5)USGS, Reston, VA, United States
Abstract:
Declines in the amount of groundwater in storage as a result of groundwater development have led to concerns about the future availability of freshwater to meet drinking-water, agricultural, industrial, and environmental needs. Industry and public drinking-water suppliers have increasingly turned to nontraditional groundwater sources, such as moderately saline (brackish) groundwater, to supplement or replace the use of freshwater. Despite the growing demand for alternative water sources, a significant potential nontraditional water resource, brackish groundwater, was last assessed almost 50 years ago. The recently (2013) initiated USGS National Brackish Groundwater Assessment, which is part of the National Water Census, will provide an updated systematic national assessment of the distribution of significant brackish groundwater resources and critical information about the hydrogeologic and chemical characterization of brackish aquifers.

As part of this study, updated national-scale maps of total dissolved-solids concentrations and chemical water types will be created using data from about 400,000 sites that have been compiled from over 30 national, regional, and state sources. However, available data are biased toward freshwater and shallow systems. Preliminary analysis indicates that about 75 percent of the dissolved-solids concentrations are from freshwater aquifers, and more than 80 percent represent depths less than 500 feet below land surface. Several techniques are used to extend the information contained in the compiled data. For about half of the sites, dissolved-solids concentration was estimated from specific conductance using statistical relations. In addition, for areas where chemical data are not available, regression models are being developed to predict the occurrence of brackish groundwater based on geospatial data such as geology and other variables that are correlated to dissolved-solids concentrations.