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Design and Installation of a Groundwater Monitoring-Well Network in the High Plains Aquifer, Colorado

October 22, 2009

The High Plains aquifer is an important water source for irrigated agriculture and domestic supplies in northeastern Colorado. To address the needs of Colorado's Groundwater Protection Program, the U.S. Geological Survey designed and installed a groundwater monitoring-well network in cooperation with the Colorado Department of Agriculture in 2008 to characterize water quality in the High Plains aquifer underlying areas of irrigated agriculture in eastern Colorado. A 30-well network was designed to provide for statistical representation of water-quality conditions by using a computerized technique to generate randomly distributed potential groundwater sampling sites based on aquifer extent, extent of irrigated agricultural land, depth to water from land surface, and saturated thickness. Twenty of the 30 sites were selected for well installation, and wells were drilled and installed during the period June-September 2008. Lithologic logs and well-construction reports were prepared for each well, and wells were developed after drilling to remove mud and foreign material to provide for good hydraulic connection between the well and aquifer. Documentation of the well-network design, site selection, lithologic logs, well-construction diagrams, and well-development records is presented in this report.

Publication Year 2009
Title Design and Installation of a Groundwater Monitoring-Well Network in the High Plains Aquifer, Colorado
DOI 10.3133/ds456
Authors L. R. Arnold, J.L. Flynn, S.S. Paschke
Publication Type Report
Publication Subtype USGS Numbered Series
Series Title Data Series
Series Number 456
Index ID ds456
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Colorado Water Science Center