Abstract

As a result of pumping in excess of recharge, water levels in alluvial aquifers within the Eastern San Joaquin Groundwater Subbasin, 130 km east of San Francisco (California, USA), declined below sea level in the early 1950s and have remained so to the present. Chloride concentrations in some wells increased during that time and exceeded the US Environmental Protection Agency’s secondary maximum contaminant level of 250 mg/L, resulting in removal of some wells from service. Sources of high-chloride water include irrigation return in 16 % of sampled wells and water from delta sediments and deeper groundwater in 50 % of sampled wells. Chloride concentrations resulting from irrigation return commonly did not exceed 100 mg/L, although nitrate concentrations were as high as 25 mg/L as nitrogen. Chloride concentrations ranged from less than 100–2,050 mg/L in wells affected by water from delta sediments and deeper groundwater. Sequential electromagnetic logs show movement of high-chloride water from delta sediments to pumping wells through permeable interconnected aquifer layers. δD and δ18O data show most groundwater originated as recharge along the front of the Sierra Nevada, but tritium and carbon-14 data suggest recharge rates in this area are low and have decreased over recent geologic time. Managed aquifer recharge at two sites show differences in water-level responses to recharge and in the physical movement of recharged water with depth related to subsurface geology. Well-bore flow logs also show rapid movement of water from recharge sites through permeable interconnected aquifer layers to pumping wells.

Highlights

  • Francisco (California, USA), declined below sea level in the early 1950s and have remained so to the present

  • The purpose of this study is to evaluate sources of high-chloride water and the effect of managed aquifer recharge on water levels and movement of water to wells at two sites in the Northeastern San Joaquin Groundwater Subbasin

  • Well installation, and water-level monitoring Alluvial deposits encountered during test drilling in the Eastern San Joaquin Groundwater Subbasin are heterogeneous, generally consisting of alternating layers of sand, silt, or clay

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Francisco (California, USA), declined below sea level in the early 1950s and have remained so to the present. Sources of high-chloride water include irrigation return in 16 % of sampled wells and water from delta sediments and deeper groundwater in 50 % of sampled wells. Chloride concentrations are increasing in coastal aquifers as a result of groundwater pumping in many areas of California (Edwards et al 2009; Hanson 2003; Reichard et al 2003; Izbicki 1996) and elsewhere (Tularam and Krishna 2009; Barlow and Reichard 2010). In addition to seawater intrusion, other possible sources of high-chloride water in near-coastal aquifers include: (1) water from deposits or rocks that are adjacent to or underlie freshwater aquifers, (2) soluble salts emplaced in sediments by the evaporation of groundwater in discharge areas, and (3) irrigation return water (Piper and Garrett 1953; Izbicki et al 2006). Numerous techniques are available and have been used to identify sources of chloride; for example, Anders et al (2013) used geochemical data in a deep coastal aquifer system in the San

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call