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Over a third of groundwater in USA public-supply aquifers is Anthropocene-age and susceptible to surface contamination

Earth Sciences

Over a third of groundwater in USA public-supply aquifers is Anthropocene-age and susceptible to surface contamination

B. C. Jurgens, K. Faulkner, et al.

Discover the intriguing age distribution of groundwater in the United States, revealing that 38% of our aquifers date back to the Anthropocene era since 1953. This groundbreaking research by Bryant C. Jurgens, Kirsten Faulkner, Peter B. McMahon, Andrew G. Hunt, Gerolamo Casile, Megan B. Young, and Kenneth Belitz showcases how aquifer type and climate influence groundwater age and susceptibility to contamination. Dive into the findings that impact our public-supply pumping system.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
The distribution of groundwater age is useful for evaluating the susceptibility and sustainability of groundwater resources. Here, we compute the aquifer-scale cumulative distribution function to characterize the age distribution for 21 Principal Aquifers that account for ~80% of public-supply pumping in the United States. The aquifer-scale cumulative distribution function for each Principal Aquifer was derived from an ensemble of modeled age distributions (~60 samples per aquifer) based on multiple tracers: tritium, tritiogenic helium-3, sulfur hexafluoride, chlorofluorocarbons, carbon-14, and radiogenic helium-4. Nationally, the groundwater is 38% Anthropocene (since 1953), 34% Holocene (75–11,800 years ago), and 28% Pleistocene (>11,800 years ago). The Anthropocene fraction ranges from <5 to 100%, indicating a wide range in susceptibility to land-surface contamination. The Pleistocene fraction of groundwater exceeds 50% in 7 eastern aquifers that are predominately confined. The Holocene fraction of groundwater exceeds 50% in 5 western aquifers that are predominantly unconfined. The sustainability of pumping from these Principal Aquifers depends on rates of recharge and release of groundwater stored in fine-grained layers.
Publisher
Communications Earth & Environment
Published On
Jul 01, 2022
Authors
Bryant C. Jurgens, Kirsten Faulkner, Peter B. McMahon, Andrew G. Hunt, Gerolamo Casile, Megan B. Young, Kenneth Belitz
Tags
groundwater
age distribution
aquifers
Anthropocene
Holocene
Pleistocene
contamination
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