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Simulating Water-Quality Trends in Public-Supply Wells in Transient Flow Systems

Models need not be complex to be useful. An existing groundwater-flow model of Salt Lake Valley, Utah, was adapted for use with convolution-based advective particle tracking to explain broad spatial trends in dissolved solids. This model supports the hypothesis that water produced from wells is incr...

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Autores principales: Jeffrey Starn, J, Green, Christopher T, Hinkle, Stephen R, Bagtzoglou, Amvrossios C, Stolp, Bernard J
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4265292/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25039912
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gwat.12230
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author Jeffrey Starn, J
Green, Christopher T
Hinkle, Stephen R
Bagtzoglou, Amvrossios C
Stolp, Bernard J
author_facet Jeffrey Starn, J
Green, Christopher T
Hinkle, Stephen R
Bagtzoglou, Amvrossios C
Stolp, Bernard J
author_sort Jeffrey Starn, J
collection PubMed
description Models need not be complex to be useful. An existing groundwater-flow model of Salt Lake Valley, Utah, was adapted for use with convolution-based advective particle tracking to explain broad spatial trends in dissolved solids. This model supports the hypothesis that water produced from wells is increasingly younger with higher proportions of surface sources as pumping changes in the basin over time. At individual wells, however, predicting specific water-quality changes remains challenging. The influence of pumping-induced transient groundwater flow on changes in mean age and source areas is significant. Mean age and source areas were mapped across the model domain to extend the results from observation wells to the entire aquifer to see where changes in concentrations of dissolved solids are expected to occur. The timing of these changes depends on accurate estimates of groundwater velocity. Calibration to tritium concentrations was used to estimate effective porosity and improve correlation between source area changes, age changes, and measured dissolved solids trends. Uncertainty in the model is due in part to spatial and temporal variations in tracer inputs, estimated tracer transport parameters, and in pumping stresses at sampling points. For tracers such as tritium, the presence of two-limbed input curves can be problematic because a single concentration can be associated with multiple disparate travel times. These shortcomings can be ameliorated by adding hydrologic and geologic detail to the model and by adding additional calibration data. However, the Salt Lake Valley model is useful even without such small-scale detail.
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spelling pubmed-42652922014-12-23 Simulating Water-Quality Trends in Public-Supply Wells in Transient Flow Systems Jeffrey Starn, J Green, Christopher T Hinkle, Stephen R Bagtzoglou, Amvrossios C Stolp, Bernard J Ground Water Research Papers/ Models need not be complex to be useful. An existing groundwater-flow model of Salt Lake Valley, Utah, was adapted for use with convolution-based advective particle tracking to explain broad spatial trends in dissolved solids. This model supports the hypothesis that water produced from wells is increasingly younger with higher proportions of surface sources as pumping changes in the basin over time. At individual wells, however, predicting specific water-quality changes remains challenging. The influence of pumping-induced transient groundwater flow on changes in mean age and source areas is significant. Mean age and source areas were mapped across the model domain to extend the results from observation wells to the entire aquifer to see where changes in concentrations of dissolved solids are expected to occur. The timing of these changes depends on accurate estimates of groundwater velocity. Calibration to tritium concentrations was used to estimate effective porosity and improve correlation between source area changes, age changes, and measured dissolved solids trends. Uncertainty in the model is due in part to spatial and temporal variations in tracer inputs, estimated tracer transport parameters, and in pumping stresses at sampling points. For tracers such as tritium, the presence of two-limbed input curves can be problematic because a single concentration can be associated with multiple disparate travel times. These shortcomings can be ameliorated by adding hydrologic and geologic detail to the model and by adding additional calibration data. However, the Salt Lake Valley model is useful even without such small-scale detail. Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2014-09 2014-07-12 /pmc/articles/PMC4265292/ /pubmed/25039912 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gwat.12230 Text en Groundwater © 2014, National Ground Water Association http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited and is not used for commercial purposes.
spellingShingle Research Papers/
Jeffrey Starn, J
Green, Christopher T
Hinkle, Stephen R
Bagtzoglou, Amvrossios C
Stolp, Bernard J
Simulating Water-Quality Trends in Public-Supply Wells in Transient Flow Systems
title Simulating Water-Quality Trends in Public-Supply Wells in Transient Flow Systems
title_full Simulating Water-Quality Trends in Public-Supply Wells in Transient Flow Systems
title_fullStr Simulating Water-Quality Trends in Public-Supply Wells in Transient Flow Systems
title_full_unstemmed Simulating Water-Quality Trends in Public-Supply Wells in Transient Flow Systems
title_short Simulating Water-Quality Trends in Public-Supply Wells in Transient Flow Systems
title_sort simulating water-quality trends in public-supply wells in transient flow systems
topic Research Papers/
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4265292/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25039912
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gwat.12230
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