Sand Hollow Reservoir in Washington County, Utah, was completed in March 2002 and is operated primarily for managed aquifer recharge by the Washington County Water Conservancy District. Sand Hollow Reservoir has remained nearly full since 2006 because of surface-water diversions of about 288,000 acre-feet (acre-ft) from 2002 through 2018. Groundwater levels in monitoring wells near the reservoir rose through 2006 and have fluctuated since then because of variations in reservoir stage and nearby pumping from production wells. Between 2004 and 2018, about 46,000 acre-ft of groundwater was withdrawn by these wells for municipal supply. In addition, about 45,000 acre-ft of shallow seepage was captured by French drains adjacent to the North and West Dams and used for municipal supply, irrigation, or returned to the reservoir. From 2002 through 2018, about 159,000 acre-ft of water seeped beneath the reservoir to recharge the underlying Navajo Sandstone aquifer, which includes about 18,500 acre-ft of recharge in the 2017–18 period since the last report.
Water quality continued to be monitored at various wells in Sand Hollow during 2017–18 to evaluate the timing and location of reservoir recharge as it moved through the aquifer. Changing geochemical conditions at monitoring well water district (WD) 12 indicated rising groundwater levels and mobilization of vadose-zone salts, which could be a precursor to the arrival of reservoir recharge. Changes to geochemical conditions and environmental tracers at monitoring well WD 22 indicated the arrival of reservoir recharge.