This USGS map shows the number of PFAS detected in tap water samples from select sites across the nation. The findings are based on a USGS study of samples taken between 2016 and 2021 from private and public supplies at 716 locations. The map does not represent the only locations in the U.S. with PFAS.
Geospatial Analyses and Applications Core Technology Team
Identifying Hazards and Risk
Attribution of weighted potential contaminant hazard ranks to understand potential contamination after major storm events.
PFAS in United States Tapwater
Mapping and web applications help communicate results and potential risk to the public.
Sediment-Bound Contaminant Resiliency and Response
Methods to understand risk and prioritize sites in response to storm events.
Identification and inventory of contaminant sources on the landscape.
Chesapeake Bay Watershed maps showing density and locations of septic systems
Tablet-enabled field forms help coordinate field efforts.
About the Research
The Geospatial Analyses and Applications Core Technology Team (CTT) as part of the Environmental Health Program collaborates with teams across USGS to develop and apply geospatial analytical methods to answer broad-scale questions about source-sink and cause-effect relationships between contaminants and vulnerable communities.
The Geospatial Analyses and Applications CTT capitalizes on key variables of importance learned from past work in place-based activities.
The methods developed and used by this team are used to 1) develop new geospatial relationships to inform metric development, 2) map key variables across broad spatial extents, 3) apply relationships developed at local-scales to broad-scales via shared variables, and 4) investigate strength of broad relationships to feedback on place-based findings. These relationships can also be used to find locations similar to these place-based study sites, which may be useful for future site-selections or result extrapolation.
Because geospatial data tends to be multi-sourced, cumbersome, and often difficult to work with, the Geospatial CTT also has a strong background in database creation, organization, and upkeep, with an emphasis on adhering to and supporting ScienceBase and DOI data standards.
The team has also developed several online and tablet-based applications to coordinate field sampling efforts, track samples throughout their journey from the field to the lab(s), and provide rich visualizations to map, query, and access approved data. In the past, many projects have focused on place-based activities, conducting valuable science to gain a deep, nuanced understanding of the system under study.
More recently there has been a call for broadly focused, integrative science to support regional and national needs. Tools and methods developed by the Geospatial CTT are well suited for finding unique ways to translate place-based activities to broader needs.
Key Analytical Capabilities
- Study site selection and characterization
- Risk assessment – real vs. perceived
- Custom metric development
- Multivariate statistics
- Big-data analysis
- Landscape analysis
- Hydrological modelling and analysis
- Geomorphic assessment
- Lidar and Remote Sensing
Analytical Tools and Products
- Statistical analysis in R
- Field-form development
- Database design and development
- Geo-narratives and Web Applications
- ScienceBase and metadata creation
- ArcGIS, GRASS, Python, GitHub†
† Hypertext links to non-USGS products and services; and the use of trade names, trademarks, company names, or other references to non-USGS products and services are provided for information only and do not constitute endorsement or warranty by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), U.S. Department of the Interior, or U.S. Government.
Science Team Collaborators
-
Drinking Water and Wastewater Infrastructure Science Team
The team studies toxicants and pathogens in water resources from their sources, through watersheds, aquifers, and infrastructure to human and wildlife exposures. That information is used to develop decision tools that protect human and wildlife health.Fishing and Hunting Integrated Science Team
The Fishing and Hunting integrated science team focuses on contaminant and pathogen exposures in the environment that could impact the presence and vitality of fish and wildlife populations that drive commercial, recreational and subsistence activities such as hunting and fishing. If actual risks are identified this project will inform how to economically and effectively minimize risk by providing...Food Resources Lifecycle Integrated Science Team
The team studies the movement of toxicants and pathogens that could originate from the growing, raising, and processing/manufacturing of plant and animal products through the environment where exposure can occur. This information is used to understand if there are adverse effects upon exposure and to develop decision tools to protect health.Minerals Science Team
The Minerals Integrated Science Team focuses on contaminant exposures in the environment that might originate from mineral resource activities including, transportation, storage, extraction and waste management. Perceived health risks to humans and other organisms will be distinguished from actual risks, if any. If actual risks are identified the science produced by this team can inform how to...Per-and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFAS) Integrated Science Team
Increasing scientific and public awareness of the widespread distribution of per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in U.S. drinking-water supplies, aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems, wildlife, and humans has raised many public health and resource management questions that U.S. Geological Survey's (USGS) science can inform. The USGS Environmental Health Program's PFAS Integrated Science Team...Energy Integrated Science Team
The Energy Lifecycle Integrated Science Team focuses on the potential for contaminant exposures in the environment that might originate from energy resource activities including, extraction, production, transportation, storage, extraction, waste management and restoration. Perceived health risks to humans and other organisms will be distinguished from actual risks, if any. If actual risks are...Toxins and Harmful Algal Blooms Science Team
The team develops advanced methods to study factors driving algal toxin production, how and where wildlife or humans are exposed to toxins, and ecotoxicology. That information is used to develop decision tools to understand if toxin exposure leads to adverse health effects in order to protect human and wildlife health.Proxies Project
The Proxies Project is a series of studies to improve our understanding of water contaminants and water quality hazards. These studies develop models and technical approaches for estimating concentrations and assessing risk associated with: - harmful algal blooms (HABs) - per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) - 12 elements of concern (EoC)Colorado River Basin: Actionable and Strategic Integrated Science and Technology (ASIST)
Through the ASIST initiative, the USGS is leading the way in open science by bringing together scientists from different fields to collaborate closely with decision makers.
Science activities related to the Geospatial Analyses and Applications Core Technology Team can be found below.
USGS Scientists Develop an Interactive Mapping Tool to Visualize PFAS in Tap Water
Collaborative Science Provides Understanding of Contaminants in Bottled Water-an Increasingly Common Alternate Drinking Water Source
Coproduced Science Linking Environmental and Public-Health Data to Evaluate Drinking Water Arsenic Exposure on Birth Outcomes
U.S. Geological Survey Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances Science Strategy Identifies Science Gaps and Opportunities
Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFAS) in Residential Tap Water: Source-to-Tap Science for Underserved Communities
Environmental Health Program Drinking Water Science
Review of Cyanobacterial Neurotoxins—Information for Prioritizing Future Science Directions
Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFASs) detected in Source Waters and Treated Public Water Supplies
Study Highlights the Complexity of Chemical Mixtures in United States Streams
Data related to the Geospatial Analyses and Applications Core Technology Team can be found below.
Dust and sediment data from Great Salt Lake and northern Utah, 2022
PFAS Reconnaissance Landscape Data
Water Chemistry and Smallmouth Bass Biological Data From the Potomac River, Dargan, Maryland, 2013-2019
SARS-CoV-2 Data from National Wastewater Surveillance System Surge Capacity Sampling, September 2021
Elevation-area-capacity tables for Lake Powell, 2018
Stream cross-section, benthic macroinvertebrate and fish taxa counts and abundance, and water chemistry data for the Clarksburg study area in Montgomery County, Maryland, 1992 - 2020
Quality assessed and modified Discharge Monitoring Report (DMR) facility and outfall locations, 2007 - 2019
Ephemeral channel heads and digital elevation models used to extract stream networks in Clarksburg, MD (ver. 2.0, October 2021)
Modified topobathymetric elevation data for Lake Powell
USGS Chesapeake Bay Study Locations Related to Theme 1 and Theme 2 Activities (ver. 3.0, October 2024)
Estrogen equivalents of surface water and smallmouth bass estrogenic biomarker data in New Jersey, 2016-2017
Analytical inorganic chemistry results for samples collected for the Sediment-Bound Contaminant Resiliency and Response Strategy pilot study, northeastern United States, 2015
Multimedia items related to the Geospatial Analyses and Applications Core Technology Team can be found below.
Generalized schematic detailing the steps in the USGS decision support
Generalized schematic detailing the steps in the USGS decision support tool for prioritizing sampling locations based on perceived environmental hazards.
This USGS map shows the number of PFAS detected in tap water samples from select sites across the nation. The findings are based on a USGS study of samples taken between 2016 and 2021 from private and public supplies at 716 locations. The map does not represent the only locations in the U.S. with PFAS.
Image of a flow-based composite sample being collected at one of the wastewater facilities to represent a 24-hour sample.
Image of a flow-based composite sample being collected at one of the wastewater facilities to represent a 24-hour sample.
Scientific publications related to the Geospatial Analyses and Applications Core Technology Team can be found below.
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in United States tapwater: Comparison of underserved private-well and public-supply exposures and associated health implications
Exposures and potential health implications of contaminant mixtures in linked source water, finished drinking water, and tapwater from public-supply drinking water systems in Minneapolis/St. Paul area, USA
Predicted aquatic exposure effects from a national urban stormwater study
Bottled water contaminant exposures and potential human effects
A case study: Temporal trends of environmental stressors and reproductive health of smallmouth bass (Micropterus dolomieu) from a site in the Potomac River Watershed, Maryland, USA
Industrial particulate pollution and historical land use contribute metals of concern to dust deposited in neighborhoods along the Wasatch Front, UT, USA
Tracking geomorphic changes after suburban development with a high density of green stormwater infrastructure practices in Montgomery County, Maryland
Ephemeral stream network extraction from lidar-derived elevation and topographic attributes in urban and forested landscapes
Arsenic in private well water and birth outcomes in the United States
Elevation-area-capacity relationships of Lake Powell in 2018 and estimated loss of storage capacity since 1963
Lessons learned from 20 y of monitoring suburban development with distributed stormwater management in Clarksburg, Maryland, USA
The statistical power to detect regional temporal trends in riverine contaminants in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed, USA
Web tools related to the Geospatial Analyses and Applications Core Technology Team can be found below.
Catalog of Geospatial Datasets for the USGS Water Quality Program, Proxies Project
The Proxies Project is a series of studies to improve our understanding of water contaminants and water quality hazards. These studies develop models and technical approaches for estimating concentrations and assessing risk associated with:
- harmful algal blooms (HABs)
- per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS)
-12 elements of concern (EoC) The Proxies Project is a series of studies to impro
PFAS in US Tapwater Interactive Dashboard
Drinking-water quality and potential exposures to per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) at the point-of-use (tapwater) are a rising concern in the United States (US).
Environmental Health Program at the U.S. Geological Survey
One Health science to address high priority issues related to human and wildlife exposures to environmental contaminants and pathogens
Drop by Drop
US Geological Survey research on contaminants in drinking water across the US.
USGS Chesapeake Bay Studies - Data Catalog
The Chesapeake Data Catalog Application is designed to allow users to identify and interact with datasets used in and across efforts related to the USGS Chesapeake Bay Watershed studies. Metadata gathered for items included in the Catalog for which this app was developed are intended to inform users of dataset details, indicate best practice
U.S. Geological Survey COVID-19 Wastewater Surveillance
USGS, as part of the National Wastewater Surveillance System, designed and implemented high-frequency sampling of wastewater across six states throughout September 2021, to support tracking of potential increases in COVID-19 infections in communities. COVID-19 viral loads were determined for each sample with the goal of delivering results to the CDC within three days of sampling.
Endocrine Disrupting Compounds in the Chesapeake
Findings from US Geological Survey studies on sources, occurrence, effects and risk of contaminants throughout the Chesapeake Bay Watershed.
Software releases related to the Geospatial Analyses and Applications Core Technology Team can be found below.
Code Release for USGS Chesapeake Bay Studies - Data Catalog Application
Connect with members of the Geospatial Analyses and Applications Core Technology Team below.
Molly Blakowski
Physical Scientist, Pathways Program
Allison Sussman
Database & GIS Specialist
Matthew Connor Morriss, PhD (Former Employee)
Physical Scientist
External partners that the Geospatial Analyses and Applications Core Technology Team collaborates with are linked below.
About the Research
The Geospatial Analyses and Applications Core Technology Team (CTT) as part of the Environmental Health Program collaborates with teams across USGS to develop and apply geospatial analytical methods to answer broad-scale questions about source-sink and cause-effect relationships between contaminants and vulnerable communities.
The Geospatial Analyses and Applications CTT capitalizes on key variables of importance learned from past work in place-based activities.
The methods developed and used by this team are used to 1) develop new geospatial relationships to inform metric development, 2) map key variables across broad spatial extents, 3) apply relationships developed at local-scales to broad-scales via shared variables, and 4) investigate strength of broad relationships to feedback on place-based findings. These relationships can also be used to find locations similar to these place-based study sites, which may be useful for future site-selections or result extrapolation.
Because geospatial data tends to be multi-sourced, cumbersome, and often difficult to work with, the Geospatial CTT also has a strong background in database creation, organization, and upkeep, with an emphasis on adhering to and supporting ScienceBase and DOI data standards.
The team has also developed several online and tablet-based applications to coordinate field sampling efforts, track samples throughout their journey from the field to the lab(s), and provide rich visualizations to map, query, and access approved data. In the past, many projects have focused on place-based activities, conducting valuable science to gain a deep, nuanced understanding of the system under study.
More recently there has been a call for broadly focused, integrative science to support regional and national needs. Tools and methods developed by the Geospatial CTT are well suited for finding unique ways to translate place-based activities to broader needs.
Key Analytical Capabilities
- Study site selection and characterization
- Risk assessment – real vs. perceived
- Custom metric development
- Multivariate statistics
- Big-data analysis
- Landscape analysis
- Hydrological modelling and analysis
- Geomorphic assessment
- Lidar and Remote Sensing
Analytical Tools and Products
- Statistical analysis in R
- Field-form development
- Database design and development
- Geo-narratives and Web Applications
- ScienceBase and metadata creation
- ArcGIS, GRASS, Python, GitHub†
† Hypertext links to non-USGS products and services; and the use of trade names, trademarks, company names, or other references to non-USGS products and services are provided for information only and do not constitute endorsement or warranty by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), U.S. Department of the Interior, or U.S. Government.
Science Team Collaborators
-
Drinking Water and Wastewater Infrastructure Science Team
The team studies toxicants and pathogens in water resources from their sources, through watersheds, aquifers, and infrastructure to human and wildlife exposures. That information is used to develop decision tools that protect human and wildlife health.Fishing and Hunting Integrated Science Team
The Fishing and Hunting integrated science team focuses on contaminant and pathogen exposures in the environment that could impact the presence and vitality of fish and wildlife populations that drive commercial, recreational and subsistence activities such as hunting and fishing. If actual risks are identified this project will inform how to economically and effectively minimize risk by providing...Food Resources Lifecycle Integrated Science Team
The team studies the movement of toxicants and pathogens that could originate from the growing, raising, and processing/manufacturing of plant and animal products through the environment where exposure can occur. This information is used to understand if there are adverse effects upon exposure and to develop decision tools to protect health.Minerals Science Team
The Minerals Integrated Science Team focuses on contaminant exposures in the environment that might originate from mineral resource activities including, transportation, storage, extraction and waste management. Perceived health risks to humans and other organisms will be distinguished from actual risks, if any. If actual risks are identified the science produced by this team can inform how to...Per-and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFAS) Integrated Science Team
Increasing scientific and public awareness of the widespread distribution of per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in U.S. drinking-water supplies, aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems, wildlife, and humans has raised many public health and resource management questions that U.S. Geological Survey's (USGS) science can inform. The USGS Environmental Health Program's PFAS Integrated Science Team...Energy Integrated Science Team
The Energy Lifecycle Integrated Science Team focuses on the potential for contaminant exposures in the environment that might originate from energy resource activities including, extraction, production, transportation, storage, extraction, waste management and restoration. Perceived health risks to humans and other organisms will be distinguished from actual risks, if any. If actual risks are...Toxins and Harmful Algal Blooms Science Team
The team develops advanced methods to study factors driving algal toxin production, how and where wildlife or humans are exposed to toxins, and ecotoxicology. That information is used to develop decision tools to understand if toxin exposure leads to adverse health effects in order to protect human and wildlife health.Proxies Project
The Proxies Project is a series of studies to improve our understanding of water contaminants and water quality hazards. These studies develop models and technical approaches for estimating concentrations and assessing risk associated with: - harmful algal blooms (HABs) - per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) - 12 elements of concern (EoC)Colorado River Basin: Actionable and Strategic Integrated Science and Technology (ASIST)
Through the ASIST initiative, the USGS is leading the way in open science by bringing together scientists from different fields to collaborate closely with decision makers.
Science activities related to the Geospatial Analyses and Applications Core Technology Team can be found below.
USGS Scientists Develop an Interactive Mapping Tool to Visualize PFAS in Tap Water
Collaborative Science Provides Understanding of Contaminants in Bottled Water-an Increasingly Common Alternate Drinking Water Source
Coproduced Science Linking Environmental and Public-Health Data to Evaluate Drinking Water Arsenic Exposure on Birth Outcomes
U.S. Geological Survey Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances Science Strategy Identifies Science Gaps and Opportunities
Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFAS) in Residential Tap Water: Source-to-Tap Science for Underserved Communities
Environmental Health Program Drinking Water Science
Review of Cyanobacterial Neurotoxins—Information for Prioritizing Future Science Directions
Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFASs) detected in Source Waters and Treated Public Water Supplies
Study Highlights the Complexity of Chemical Mixtures in United States Streams
Data related to the Geospatial Analyses and Applications Core Technology Team can be found below.
Dust and sediment data from Great Salt Lake and northern Utah, 2022
PFAS Reconnaissance Landscape Data
Water Chemistry and Smallmouth Bass Biological Data From the Potomac River, Dargan, Maryland, 2013-2019
SARS-CoV-2 Data from National Wastewater Surveillance System Surge Capacity Sampling, September 2021
Elevation-area-capacity tables for Lake Powell, 2018
Stream cross-section, benthic macroinvertebrate and fish taxa counts and abundance, and water chemistry data for the Clarksburg study area in Montgomery County, Maryland, 1992 - 2020
Quality assessed and modified Discharge Monitoring Report (DMR) facility and outfall locations, 2007 - 2019
Ephemeral channel heads and digital elevation models used to extract stream networks in Clarksburg, MD (ver. 2.0, October 2021)
Modified topobathymetric elevation data for Lake Powell
USGS Chesapeake Bay Study Locations Related to Theme 1 and Theme 2 Activities (ver. 3.0, October 2024)
Estrogen equivalents of surface water and smallmouth bass estrogenic biomarker data in New Jersey, 2016-2017
Analytical inorganic chemistry results for samples collected for the Sediment-Bound Contaminant Resiliency and Response Strategy pilot study, northeastern United States, 2015
Multimedia items related to the Geospatial Analyses and Applications Core Technology Team can be found below.
Generalized schematic detailing the steps in the USGS decision support
Generalized schematic detailing the steps in the USGS decision support tool for prioritizing sampling locations based on perceived environmental hazards.
This USGS map shows the number of PFAS detected in tap water samples from select sites across the nation. The findings are based on a USGS study of samples taken between 2016 and 2021 from private and public supplies at 716 locations. The map does not represent the only locations in the U.S. with PFAS.
This USGS map shows the number of PFAS detected in tap water samples from select sites across the nation. The findings are based on a USGS study of samples taken between 2016 and 2021 from private and public supplies at 716 locations. The map does not represent the only locations in the U.S. with PFAS.
Image of a flow-based composite sample being collected at one of the wastewater facilities to represent a 24-hour sample.
Image of a flow-based composite sample being collected at one of the wastewater facilities to represent a 24-hour sample.
Scientific publications related to the Geospatial Analyses and Applications Core Technology Team can be found below.
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in United States tapwater: Comparison of underserved private-well and public-supply exposures and associated health implications
Exposures and potential health implications of contaminant mixtures in linked source water, finished drinking water, and tapwater from public-supply drinking water systems in Minneapolis/St. Paul area, USA
Predicted aquatic exposure effects from a national urban stormwater study
Bottled water contaminant exposures and potential human effects
A case study: Temporal trends of environmental stressors and reproductive health of smallmouth bass (Micropterus dolomieu) from a site in the Potomac River Watershed, Maryland, USA
Industrial particulate pollution and historical land use contribute metals of concern to dust deposited in neighborhoods along the Wasatch Front, UT, USA
Tracking geomorphic changes after suburban development with a high density of green stormwater infrastructure practices in Montgomery County, Maryland
Ephemeral stream network extraction from lidar-derived elevation and topographic attributes in urban and forested landscapes
Arsenic in private well water and birth outcomes in the United States
Elevation-area-capacity relationships of Lake Powell in 2018 and estimated loss of storage capacity since 1963
Lessons learned from 20 y of monitoring suburban development with distributed stormwater management in Clarksburg, Maryland, USA
The statistical power to detect regional temporal trends in riverine contaminants in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed, USA
Web tools related to the Geospatial Analyses and Applications Core Technology Team can be found below.
Catalog of Geospatial Datasets for the USGS Water Quality Program, Proxies Project
The Proxies Project is a series of studies to improve our understanding of water contaminants and water quality hazards. These studies develop models and technical approaches for estimating concentrations and assessing risk associated with:
- harmful algal blooms (HABs)
- per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS)
-12 elements of concern (EoC) The Proxies Project is a series of studies to impro
PFAS in US Tapwater Interactive Dashboard
Drinking-water quality and potential exposures to per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) at the point-of-use (tapwater) are a rising concern in the United States (US).
Environmental Health Program at the U.S. Geological Survey
One Health science to address high priority issues related to human and wildlife exposures to environmental contaminants and pathogens
Drop by Drop
US Geological Survey research on contaminants in drinking water across the US.
USGS Chesapeake Bay Studies - Data Catalog
The Chesapeake Data Catalog Application is designed to allow users to identify and interact with datasets used in and across efforts related to the USGS Chesapeake Bay Watershed studies. Metadata gathered for items included in the Catalog for which this app was developed are intended to inform users of dataset details, indicate best practice
U.S. Geological Survey COVID-19 Wastewater Surveillance
USGS, as part of the National Wastewater Surveillance System, designed and implemented high-frequency sampling of wastewater across six states throughout September 2021, to support tracking of potential increases in COVID-19 infections in communities. COVID-19 viral loads were determined for each sample with the goal of delivering results to the CDC within three days of sampling.
Endocrine Disrupting Compounds in the Chesapeake
Findings from US Geological Survey studies on sources, occurrence, effects and risk of contaminants throughout the Chesapeake Bay Watershed.
Software releases related to the Geospatial Analyses and Applications Core Technology Team can be found below.
Code Release for USGS Chesapeake Bay Studies - Data Catalog Application
Connect with members of the Geospatial Analyses and Applications Core Technology Team below.
Molly Blakowski
Physical Scientist, Pathways Program
Allison Sussman
Database & GIS Specialist
Matthew Connor Morriss, PhD (Former Employee)
Physical Scientist
External partners that the Geospatial Analyses and Applications Core Technology Team collaborates with are linked below.