Report: Farming and Urban Growth Are Polluting America’s Aquifers By Brett Walton

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Report: Farming and Urban Growth Are Polluting America's Aquifers

FRIDAY, 23 JANUARY 2015 16:56

One-fifth of U.S. groundwater wells had at least one contaminant above federal standards for human health.

U.S. Geological Survey United States aquifer groundwater water quality pollution

Image courtesy of the U.S. Geological Survey The U.S. Geological Survey compiled more than 230 aquifer studies for a snapshot of groundwater quality in 62 principal aquifers the United States. The map above shows the percent of wells in each aquifer that had at least one contaminant at a concentration higher than federal standards for human health. Green wedges show naturally occurring sources while red indicates the share of wells with manmade contaminants. Click image to enlarge.

By Brett Walton
Circle of Blue

Farming and urban growth, two forces that are reshaping the land surface, are also changing the chemistry and physical properties of the nation's aquifers, leading to greater concentrations of natural and manmade pollutants that could persist for decades in essential underground water sources, according toa comprehensive U.S. Geological Survey report.

The report, released on January 21, is a summary of more than 230 groundwater studies that sampled water from 6,620 wells between 1991 and 2010. The studies assessed water quality in aquifers used as a drinking water source, as well as in shallow aquifers beneath farmland and urban areas.

"The restoration of groundwater supplies that have become contaminated is difficult, is costly, and can take decades."

-U.S. Geological Survey report
"Water Quality in Principal Aquifers of the United States, 1991-2010″

In the last two decades, according to the report, most of America's 62 principal aquifers, which supply drinking water to more than 40 percent of the country and provide 55 percent of the nation's irrigation water, have become dirtier. Two-thirds of the study areas saw an increase in the concentration of dissolved solids and chlorides, which are salts that can harm fish, or nitrates, which cause blood disorders in humans and can be fatal to infants.

The most common sources of pollution are from naturally occurring elements that dissolve in water: arsenic, radium, and uranium. These pollutants appear most frequently in the Mississippi River Valley, the New England states, and the desert Southwest.

Nitrate , a byproduct of fertilizer, is the most prevalent manmade contaminant, occurring most frequently in central Washington, California 's Central Valley, and along the Atlantic coast from North Carolina to New Jersey .

Increasing nitrate levels are at the heart ofa Clean Water Act lawsuit being prepared by the water utility that serves Des Moines, Iowa. The lawsuit challenges inadequate federal regulation of water pollution from farms.

Detecting pollution, however, does not mean it is harmful. The report also compared the concentration of each pollutant with U.S. Environmental Protection Agency benchmarks for the protection of human health. More than one-fifth of groundwater samples — 22 percent — had at least one contaminant above federal standards. Another caveat: because the water samples used for the report were taken before the water was treated by municipal systems, the results do not indicate pollution in tap water. Private residential wells, however, are not subjected to federal standards and could be at risk if homeowners do not have treatment systems.

The degradation of groundwater quality is due in large part to changes above ground. According to the report, developed land in the United States increased 60 percent between 1982 and 2010 — an expanse of prairie, forest, and field the size of Oklahoma that was turned into lawns, homes, and roads. Lawn chemicals, salts that clear roads of ice, and the grime flushed from city streets can all end up in aquifers. On farms, fertilizer use doubled in the last four decades, lifting nitrate concentrations across the country.

All in all, levels of pesticides, nitrates, and other pollutants were highest in the upper layers of the aquifers. Because water seeps downward, often over decades, the contaminants will slowly add to the cost of purifying municipal drinking water, which is drawn from deeper aquifer layers.

"Over time, the changes that we see in shallow groundwater are likely to appear in the deeper parts of aquifers, as the shallow groundwater moves downward," the report notes. "This change in quality of deeper aquifers is a concern for the future because the restoration of groundwater supplies that have become contaminated is difficult, is costly, and can take decades."

FULL Article:

http://www.circleofblue.org/waternews/2015/world/report-farming-urban-growth-polluting-americas-aquifers/