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Groundwater Quality Data of the Chicot aquifer system
This dataset contains digitized groundwater quality data from 435 wells that are screened in the Chicot aquifer system. Reported values of interest included specific conductance, total dissolved solids, and chloride (Cl) concentration; other parameters and major/trace element concentrations were included if reported. Values listed as “NA” or “-9999” represent data that was not reported in the physical dataset. A concentration of 0 ppm or ppb represents a reported concentration of 0 and not a null value. Data were collected from scanned versions of well registration records obtained from the Louisiana Department of Natural Resources. Most well registration records may be accessed through Strategic Online Natural Resources Information System (SONRIS database found at https://www.sonris.com), however some records may only be available in hard copy format.
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Groundwater Quality Data of the Chicot aquifer system
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This dataset contains digitized groundwater quality data from 435 wells that are screened in the Chicot aquifer system. Reported values of interest included specific conductance, total dissolved solids, and chloride (Cl) concentration; other parameters and major/trace element concentrations were included if reported. Values listed as “NA” or “-9999” represent data that was not reported in the physical dataset. A concentration of 0 ppm or ppb represents a reported concentration of 0 and not a null value. Data were collected from scanned versions of well registration records obtained from the Louisiana Department of Natural Resources. Most well registration records may be accessed through Strategic Online Natural Resources Information System (SONRIS database found at https://www.sonris.com), however some records may only be available in hard copy format.
Wells with water-level records in Chicot aquifer system from Louisiana Department of Natural Resource's Strategic Online Natural Resources Information System (SONRIS) for statistical analysis
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This data set consists of the remaining 6,701 water-level records formatted in the "infoGW" object format that met specific criteria for the visGWDB groundwater-level informatics software framework. This criteria ensures that the water-level records were representative of true groundwater conditions in the Chicot aquifer system and associated aquifer units in southwestern Louisiana.
Final Dataset of wells with water-level records in Chicot aquifer system from Louisiana Department of Natural Resources' Strategic Online Natural Resources Information System (SONRIS)
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This dataset contain the final 6,298 water-level records that met all threshold criteria and had absolute residuals (ABS_PSEUDO_LEVRES) not exceeding 20 feet and exceeding the 99th percentile. This final dataset is considered a best representation of the true water levels in the aquifer.
Final Dataset of wells with water-level records in Chicot aquifer system from Louisiana Department of Natural Resources' Strategic Online Natural Resources Information System (SONRIS)
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This dataset contain the final 6,298 water-level records that met all threshold criteria and had absolute residuals (ABS_PSEUDO_LEVRES) not exceeding 20 feet and exceeding the 99th percentile. This final dataset is considered a best representation of the true water levels in the aquifer.
Data for Groundwater-Quality and Select Quality-Control Data for the Colorado Plateaus Principal Aquifer
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Groundwater samples were collected from 60 public supply wells in the Colorado Plateaus principal aquifer. Water quality evaluations of groundwater for drinking water at public supply depths were made with the purpose of summarizing the current quality of source water (that is, untreated water) from public supply wells using two types of assessments; (1) status: an assessment that describes the current quality of the groundwater resource, and (2) understanding: an evaluation of the natural and human factors affecting the quality of groundwater, including an explanation of statistically significant associations between water quality and selected explanatory factors. To provide context for water-quality data, constituent concentrations of untreated groundwater are compared with available water-quality benchmarks Federal regulatory benchmarks for protecting human health (maximum contaminant levels [MCLs]; U.S. Environmental Protection Agency [USEPA] primary drinking water regulations; U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 2018a) are used for this evaluation. Additionally, non-regulatory human-health benchmarks (health-based screening levels [HBSLs]; Norman and others, 2018; U.S. Geological Survey, 2018); and federal non-regulatory benchmarks for nuisance chemicals (USEPA secondary maximum contaminant levels [SMCLs]; U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 2018b) are used. This report considers benchmarks in the context of health-based (MCLs and HBSLs) and non-health based (SMCLs) benchmarks. This sampling approach uses an equal-area grid design (Belitz and others, 2010) which allows for the estimation of the proportion of high, moderate, or low concentrations relative to federal water-quality benchmarks of selected constituents over the entire area of the aquifer. Tables included in this data release: Table 1. Identification, location, and construction information for wells sampled for the U.S. Geological Survey National Water-Quality Assessment Project, Colorado Plateaus principal aquifer, June 2013 through December 2017. Table 2. Constituent primary uses and sources; analytical schedules and sampling period; USGS parameter codes; comparison thresholds and reporting levels wells sampled for the for the U.S. Geological Survey National Water-Quality Assessment Project, Colorado Plateaus principal aquifer, June 2013 through December 2017. Table 3. Water-quality indicators in groundwater samples collected by the for the U.S. Geological Survey National Water-Quality Assessment Project, Colorado Plateaus principal aquifer, June 2013 through December 2017. [Table code definitions: NC, not collected; <, less than] Table 4. Nutrients and dissolved organic carbon in groundwater samples collected by the U.S. Geological Survey National Water-Quality Assessment Project, Colorado Plateaus principal aquifer, June 2013 through December 2017. [Table code definitions: --, less than minimum laboratory reporting level] Table 5. Major and minor ions in groundwater samples collected by the U.S. Geological Survey National Water-Quality Assessment Project, Colorado Plateaus principal aquifer, June 2013 through December 2017. [Table code definitions: --, less than minimum laboratory reporting level; E, estimated] Table 6. Trace elements in groundwater samples collected by the U.S. Geological Survey National Water-Quality Assessment Project, Colorado Plateaus principal aquifer, June 2013 through December 2017. [Table code definitions: NC, not collected; --, less than minimum laboratory reporting level] Table 7. Radionuclides in groundwater samples collected by the U.S. Geological Survey National Water-Quality Assessment Project, Colorado Plateaus principal aquifer, June 2013 through December 2017. [Table code definitions: --, less than minimum laboratory reporting level] Table 8. Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in groundwater samples collected by the U.S. Geological Survey National Water-Quality Assessment Project, Colorado Plateaus principal aquifer,
Data for Groundwater-Quality and Select Quality-Control Data for the Colorado Plateaus Principal Aquifer
공공데이터포털
Groundwater samples were collected from 60 public supply wells in the Colorado Plateaus principal aquifer. Water quality evaluations of groundwater for drinking water at public supply depths were made with the purpose of summarizing the current quality of source water (that is, untreated water) from public supply wells using two types of assessments; (1) status: an assessment that describes the current quality of the groundwater resource, and (2) understanding: an evaluation of the natural and human factors affecting the quality of groundwater, including an explanation of statistically significant associations between water quality and selected explanatory factors. To provide context for water-quality data, constituent concentrations of untreated groundwater are compared with available water-quality benchmarks Federal regulatory benchmarks for protecting human health (maximum contaminant levels [MCLs]; U.S. Environmental Protection Agency [USEPA] primary drinking water regulations; U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 2018a) are used for this evaluation. Additionally, non-regulatory human-health benchmarks (health-based screening levels [HBSLs]; Norman and others, 2018; U.S. Geological Survey, 2018); and federal non-regulatory benchmarks for nuisance chemicals (USEPA secondary maximum contaminant levels [SMCLs]; U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 2018b) are used. This report considers benchmarks in the context of health-based (MCLs and HBSLs) and non-health based (SMCLs) benchmarks. This sampling approach uses an equal-area grid design (Belitz and others, 2010) which allows for the estimation of the proportion of high, moderate, or low concentrations relative to federal water-quality benchmarks of selected constituents over the entire area of the aquifer. Tables included in this data release: Table 1. Identification, location, and construction information for wells sampled for the U.S. Geological Survey National Water-Quality Assessment Project, Colorado Plateaus principal aquifer, June 2013 through December 2017. Table 2. Constituent primary uses and sources; analytical schedules and sampling period; USGS parameter codes; comparison thresholds and reporting levels wells sampled for the for the U.S. Geological Survey National Water-Quality Assessment Project, Colorado Plateaus principal aquifer, June 2013 through December 2017. Table 3. Water-quality indicators in groundwater samples collected by the for the U.S. Geological Survey National Water-Quality Assessment Project, Colorado Plateaus principal aquifer, June 2013 through December 2017. [Table code definitions: NC, not collected; <, less than] Table 4. Nutrients and dissolved organic carbon in groundwater samples collected by the U.S. Geological Survey National Water-Quality Assessment Project, Colorado Plateaus principal aquifer, June 2013 through December 2017. [Table code definitions: --, less than minimum laboratory reporting level] Table 5. Major and minor ions in groundwater samples collected by the U.S. Geological Survey National Water-Quality Assessment Project, Colorado Plateaus principal aquifer, June 2013 through December 2017. [Table code definitions: --, less than minimum laboratory reporting level; E, estimated] Table 6. Trace elements in groundwater samples collected by the U.S. Geological Survey National Water-Quality Assessment Project, Colorado Plateaus principal aquifer, June 2013 through December 2017. [Table code definitions: NC, not collected; --, less than minimum laboratory reporting level] Table 7. Radionuclides in groundwater samples collected by the U.S. Geological Survey National Water-Quality Assessment Project, Colorado Plateaus principal aquifer, June 2013 through December 2017. [Table code definitions: --, less than minimum laboratory reporting level] Table 8. Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in groundwater samples collected by the U.S. Geological Survey National Water-Quality Assessment Project, Colorado Plateaus principal aquifer,
Groundwater Quality Data from the National Water Quality Assessment Project, May 2012 through December 2013: data tables and metadata files
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Groundwater-quality data were collected from 748 wells as part of the National Water-Quality Assessment Project of the U.S. Geological Survey National Water-Quality Program from May 2012 through December 2013. The data were collected from four types of well networks: principal aquifer study networks, which assess the quality of groundwater used for public water supply; land-use study networks, which assess land-use effects on shallow groundwater quality; major aquifer study networks, which assess the quality of groundwater used for domestic supply; and enhanced trends networks, which evaluate the time scales during which groundwater quality changes. Groundwater samples were analyzed for a large number of water-quality indicators and constituents, including major ions, nutrients, trace elements, volatile organic compounds, pesticides, and radionuclides. These groundwater quality data are tabulated in a U.S. Geological Survey Data Series Report DS-997 which is available at http://dx.doi.org/10.3133/ds997 and in this data release. Quality-control samples also were collected; data from blank and replicate quality-control samples are included in the related report (DS-997) and this data release. This compressed file contains 28 files of groundwater-quality data in ASCII text tab-delimited format and 28 corresponding metadata in xml format for wells sampled for the U.S. Geological Survey National Water-Quality Assessment Project, May 2012 through December 2013.
Groundwater Quality Data from the National Water Quality Assessment Project, May 2012 through December 2013: data tables and metadata files
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Groundwater-quality data were collected from 748 wells as part of the National Water-Quality Assessment Project of the U.S. Geological Survey National Water-Quality Program from May 2012 through December 2013. The data were collected from four types of well networks: principal aquifer study networks, which assess the quality of groundwater used for public water supply; land-use study networks, which assess land-use effects on shallow groundwater quality; major aquifer study networks, which assess the quality of groundwater used for domestic supply; and enhanced trends networks, which evaluate the time scales during which groundwater quality changes. Groundwater samples were analyzed for a large number of water-quality indicators and constituents, including major ions, nutrients, trace elements, volatile organic compounds, pesticides, and radionuclides. These groundwater quality data are tabulated in a U.S. Geological Survey Data Series Report DS-997 which is available at http://dx.doi.org/10.3133/ds997 and in this data release. Quality-control samples also were collected; data from blank and replicate quality-control samples are included in the related report (DS-997) and this data release. This compressed file contains 28 files of groundwater-quality data in ASCII text tab-delimited format and 28 corresponding metadata in xml format for wells sampled for the U.S. Geological Survey National Water-Quality Assessment Project, May 2012 through December 2013.
Groundwater-quality data in the Sacramento Metropolitan shallow aquifer study unit, 2017: Tables
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The U.S. Geological Survey collected groundwater samples from 49 wells used for domestic and small system drinking water supplies in Amador, Placer, Sutter, and Sacramento Counties, California in 2017. The wells were sampled for the Sacramento Metropolitan (SacMetro) Shallow Aquifer Study Unit of the California State Water Resources Control Board Groundwater Ambient Monitoring and Assessment (GAMA) Program Priority Basin Project’s assessment of the quality of groundwater resources used for domestic and small system drinking water supplies. Domestic and small-system wells are commonly screened at shallower depths than public-supply wells. The SacMetro study unit consisted of three “study areas” corresponding to three California Department of Water Resources groundwater subbasins: the North American and South American subbasins of the Sacramento Valley groundwater basin, and the Cosumnes subbasin of the San Joaquin Valley groundwater basin. Wells in the SacMetro study unit were in alluvial aquifers composed of sediments derived from the Sierra Nevada Mountains east of the study unit. The study unit was divided into 56 approximately 58 square kilometer grid cells, and a domestic or small-system well was sampled in 49 of those cells. Groundwater samples from all 49 wells were analyzed for field water-quality parameters, volatile organic compounds, pesticides and pesticide degradates, nutrients, major ions and trace elements, arsenic speciation, chromium (VI), perchlorate, gross alpha and gross beta particle activities, sulfur hexafluoride, tritium, carbon-14 in dissolved inorganic carbon, noble gases, stable isotopic ratios of water and dissolved nitrate, and microbial indicators. Groundwater levels were measured in 44 of the 49 wells. All results are presented in this data release, except results for pesticide and pesticide degradates. In 2017, the U.S. Geological Survey National Water-Quality Assessment (NAWQA) Program sampled 22 monitoring wells located in the SacMetro study unit as part of ongoing NAWQA studies of groundwater quality in different land-use settings. Of the 22 wells, 21 were part of an urban land-use network and 1 was part of a rice land use network. Results for analyses of perchlorate, chromium (VI), and stable isotopic ratios are presented in this data release, and results for analyses of field water-quality parameters, volatile organic compounds, pesticide and pesticide degradates, nutrients, major ions and trace elements, dissolved organic carbon, and tritium will be presented in a data release to be published separately by NAWQA. This data release supports the following publication: Groundwater Quality in the Sacramento Metropolitan shallow aquifer, California: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 2019-1047, 4p., https://doi.org/10.3133/ofr20191047.
Groundwater-quality data in the Sacramento Metropolitan shallow aquifer study unit, 2017: Tables
공공데이터포털
The U.S. Geological Survey collected groundwater samples from 49 wells used for domestic and small system drinking water supplies in Amador, Placer, Sutter, and Sacramento Counties, California in 2017. The wells were sampled for the Sacramento Metropolitan (SacMetro) Shallow Aquifer Study Unit of the California State Water Resources Control Board Groundwater Ambient Monitoring and Assessment (GAMA) Program Priority Basin Project’s assessment of the quality of groundwater resources used for domestic and small system drinking water supplies. Domestic and small-system wells are commonly screened at shallower depths than public-supply wells. The SacMetro study unit consisted of three “study areas” corresponding to three California Department of Water Resources groundwater subbasins: the North American and South American subbasins of the Sacramento Valley groundwater basin, and the Cosumnes subbasin of the San Joaquin Valley groundwater basin. Wells in the SacMetro study unit were in alluvial aquifers composed of sediments derived from the Sierra Nevada Mountains east of the study unit. The study unit was divided into 56 approximately 58 square kilometer grid cells, and a domestic or small-system well was sampled in 49 of those cells. Groundwater samples from all 49 wells were analyzed for field water-quality parameters, volatile organic compounds, pesticides and pesticide degradates, nutrients, major ions and trace elements, arsenic speciation, chromium (VI), perchlorate, gross alpha and gross beta particle activities, sulfur hexafluoride, tritium, carbon-14 in dissolved inorganic carbon, noble gases, stable isotopic ratios of water and dissolved nitrate, and microbial indicators. Groundwater levels were measured in 44 of the 49 wells. All results are presented in this data release, except results for pesticide and pesticide degradates. In 2017, the U.S. Geological Survey National Water-Quality Assessment (NAWQA) Program sampled 22 monitoring wells located in the SacMetro study unit as part of ongoing NAWQA studies of groundwater quality in different land-use settings. Of the 22 wells, 21 were part of an urban land-use network and 1 was part of a rice land use network. Results for analyses of perchlorate, chromium (VI), and stable isotopic ratios are presented in this data release, and results for analyses of field water-quality parameters, volatile organic compounds, pesticide and pesticide degradates, nutrients, major ions and trace elements, dissolved organic carbon, and tritium will be presented in a data release to be published separately by NAWQA. This data release supports the following publication: Groundwater Quality in the Sacramento Metropolitan shallow aquifer, California: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 2019-1047, 4p., https://doi.org/10.3133/ofr20191047.