| National Water-Quality Assessment
(NAWQA) Program Home Page

National Map with
Links to Study Units
Project
Publications Project
Main Page
USGS
National Water Quality Assessment Data Warehouse
|
MA-100
--- Abstract
Hydrogeology
and Water Quality of a Surficial Aquifer Underlying an Urban Area,
Manchester, Connecticut
Water-Resources
Investigations Report 97-4195
By
John R. Mullaney and Stephen J. Grady
The
quality of water along flowpaths in a surficial aquifer system in
Manchester, Connecticut, was studied during 1993-95 as part of the
National Water Quality Assessment program. The flowpath study
examined the relations among hydrogeology, land-use patterns, and
the presence of contaminants in a surficial aquifer in an urban
area, and evaluated ground water as a source of contamination to
surface water.
A
two-dimensional, finite-difference ground-water-flow model was
used to estimate travel distance, which ranged from about 50 to
11,000 feet, from the source areas to the sampled observation
wells. Land use, land cover, and population density were
determined in the source areas delineated by the ground-water-flow
simulation. Source areas to the wells contained either high- or
medium-density residential areas, and population density ranged
from 629 to 8,895 people per square mile.
Concentrations of
selected inorganic constituents, including sodium, chloride, and
nitrite plus nitrate nitrogen, were higher in the flowpath study
wells than in wells in undeveloped areas with similar aquifer
materials. One or more of 9 volatile organic compounds were
detected at 12 of 14 wells. The three most commonly detected
volatile organic compounds were chloroform, methyl-tert-butyl
ether, and trichloroethene. Trichloroethene was detected at
concentrations greater than the maximum contaminant level for
drinking water (5 micrograms per liter) in samples from one well.
Four pesticides, including dichloro diphenyl dichloroethylene,
dieldrin, dichloroprop, and simazine were detected at low
concentrations.
Concentrations of
sodium and chloride were higher in samples collected from wells
screened in the top of the saturated zone than in samples
collected from deeper zones. Volatile organic compounds and
elevated concentrations of nitrite plus nitrate as nitrogen were
detected at depths of as much as 60 feet below the water table,
indicating that the effects of human activities on the
ground-water quality extends to the bottom of the surficial
aquifer.
The age of ground
water, as determined by tritium and 3helium
concentrations, was 0.9 to 22.6 years. pH, alkalinity, and calcium
were higher and concentrations of dissolved oxygen were lower in
ground-water samples with ages of 10 years or more than in samples
younger than 10 years. In addition, concentrations of sodium,
chloride, and nitrite plus nitrate nitrogen were low in
ground-water samples with ages of 10 years or more, indicating
that concentrations of these compounds may be increasing with time
or that the recharge areas to these wells may have had less
intensive urban land use. Methyl-tert-
butyl ether was detected only in wells with ground water ages of
less than 11 years, which is consistent with the date of
introduction of this compound as a gasoline additive in
Connecticut.
Analysis of
additional samples collected for analysis of stable nitrogen
isotopes indicated that the most likely source of elevated
concentrations of nitrate nitrogen was lawn and garden
fertilizers, but other sources, including wastewater effluents,
soil organic nitrogen, and atmospheric deposition, may contribute
to the total. Population density was positively correlated (at the
97 percent confidence level) to concentrations of nitrite plus
nitrate as nitrogen.
Water quality in
the Hockanum River aquifer has been degraded by human activities,
and, after discharge to surface water, affects the water quality
in the Hockanum River. On an annual basis, ground- water discharge
from the study area to the river (as measured at a downstream
continuous-record gaging station) contributes about 5 percent of
the annual load of nitrite plus nitrate nitrogen, but, during low
flow, contributes 11 percent of the nitrite plus nitrate nitrogen,
32 percent of the calcium, and 16 percent of the chloride to the
river.
For additional information contact:
|