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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

Utah Geological Association

Abstract


Geology and Geologic Resources and Issues of Western Utah, 2009
Pages 361-370

Effects of Climatic Extremes on Ground Previous HitWaterNext Hit in Western Utah, 1930 to 2009

Joseph S. Gates

Abstract

Climatic extremes affect ground-Previous HitwaterNext Hit levels and quality in the basins of western Utah. The five droughts since 1930: 1930-36, 1953-65, 1974-78, 1988-93, and 1999-2004—resulted in much-less-than-average recharge, and the pronounced wet period of 1982-86 resulted in much-greater-than-average recharge. Decreased recharge lowered the ground-Previous HitwaterNext Hit level, and increased recharge raised it. These changes were largest in recharge areas—in discharge areas the Previous HitwaterNext Hit level is relatively constant and the primary effect is a change in the discharge area—smaller during a drought and larger during a pronounced wet period.

The largest part of Previous HitwaterNext Hit-level change during climatic extremes, however, is not a result of changes in recharge but is related to changes in ground-Previous HitwaterNext Hit withdrawal. During a drought withdrawals increase to satisfy increased demand for ground Previous HitwaterNext Hit, especially in irrigated areas, and Previous HitwaterNext Hit levels decline. During a pronounced wet period, withdrawals decrease because of less demand and Previous HitwaterNext Hit levels rise. The amount of Previous HitwaterNext Hit-level change in representative observation wells in a basin is generally proportional to the basin’s withdrawal. In undeveloped Tule Valley, Previous HitwaterNext Hit-level changes related to climatic extremes during 1981-2009 are less than 2 feet. In Snake Valley (small withdrawal), Tooele Valley (moderate withdrawal), and Pahvant Valley (large withdrawal), Previous HitwaterNext Hit-level declines in representative wells from 1984-86 to 2009 were 20.7, 28.2, and 57.2 feet, respectively.

Ground-Previous HitwaterNext Hit quality is also affected by climatic extremes. In six irrigated areas in western Utah, Previous HitwaterNext Hit-level decline during drought has induced flow of Previous HitwaterNext Hit having large dissolved-solids concentrations toward areas of pumping, increasing the dissolved-solids concentrations in Previous HitwaterTop sampled from observation wells. During the 1982-86 wet period, increased recharge resulted in a later decrease in dissolved-solids concentrations in three basins.


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