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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

Utah Geological Association

Abstract


Geology of Northern Utah and Vicinity, 1999
Pages 275-312

Protecting Ground-Previous HitWaterNext Hit Previous HitQualityNext Hit Through Aquifer Classification—Examples from Cache, Ogden, and Tooele Valleys, Utah

Mike Lowe, Janae Wallace

Abstract

Ground Previous HitwaterNext Hit is the most important source of drinking Previous HitwaterNext Hit in Utah, the second most arid state in the nation. Ground Previous HitwaterNext Hit can be extremely vulnerable to contamination, and remediating contaminated ground Previous HitwaterNext Hit is expensive and time consumptive. Aquifer classification is a relatively new and little known tool for local governments in Utah to use for managing potential ground-Previous HitwaterNext Hit contamination sources and protecting the Previous HitqualityNext Hit of their ground-Previous HitwaterNext Hit resources. Utah’s ground-Previous HitwaterNext Hit-Previous HitqualityNext Hit classes are based mostly on total-dissolved-solids concentrations as follows: class 1A (Pristine), less than 500 mg/L; class 2 (Drinking Previous HitWaterNext Hit Previous HitQualityNext Hit), 500 to less than 3,000 mg/L; class 3 (Limited Use), 3,000 to less than 10,000 mg/L; and class 4 (Saline), 10,000 mg/L and greater. Two other ground-Previous HitwaterNext Hit-Previous HitqualityNext Hit classes, class 1B (Irreplaceable) and class 1C (Ecologically Important), are not based on total-dissolved-solids concentrations and are not addressed in our studies.

Cache Valley, Ogden Valley, and Tooele Valley are areas in northern Utah that are experiencing an increase in residential development. Most of the development is on unconsolidated deposits of the basin-/valley-fill aquifers, which provide the primary drinking-Previous HitwaterNext Hit supply for communities in those valleys. The purpose of our studies is to classify the ground-Previous HitwaterNext Hit Previous HitqualityNext Hit of the principal aquifers to formally identify and document the beneficial use of each valley’s ground-Previous HitwaterNext Hit resource. The Previous HitqualityNext Hit of Previous HitwaterNext Hit is generally good for all three valleys. Cache Valley ground Previous HitwaterNext Hit is classified as class 1A (84 percent) and class 2(16 percent), based on chemical analyses of Previous HitwaterNext Hit obtained from 164 wells sampled during fall 1997 and winter/spring 1998-1999. Total-dissolved-solids concentrations in Cache Valley range from 178 to 1,010 mg/L. Ogden Valley ground Previous HitwaterNext Hit is classified as class 1 A, based on chemical analyses of Previous HitwaterNext Hit obtained from 87 wells sampled during 1985-86 and spring/fall 1997. Total-dissolved-solids concentrations in Ogden Valley range from 42 to 629 mg/L. Tooele Valley has a more varied chemistry due to its proximity to Great Salt Lake. Ground-Previous HitwaterNext Hit Previous HitqualityNext Hit classes there include class 1A (26 percent), class 2 (46 percent), class 4 (22.5 percent), and combined classes (5.5 percent). Total-dissolved-solids concentrations in Tooele Valley range from 256 to 37,800 mg/L, based on Previous HitwaterNext Hit-Previous HitqualityTop data collected between 1964 and 1995.


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