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Availability of water from limestone and dolomite aquifers in southwest Ohio and the relation of water quality to the regional flow system

January 1, 1973

The largest ground-water supplies from the 150 to 450-foot thick carbonate-rock aquifer in southwest Ohio are available in a 2,800 squaremile area on the crest and eastern flank of the Cincinnati arch. Well production in the high-yield area is mainly from the Newburg zone, a permeable stratum in the lower part of the Bass Island group. A ' structure contour map on the top of the Lockport Dolomite shows that the Newburg zone conforms to the configuration of the Cincinnati arch. The chemical quality of the water in the consolidated-rock aquifers is intimately related to the regional flow system, and undergoes a progressive change from a calcium bicarbonate-type in recharge areas to a calcium sulfate-type in areas of natural discharge.

Publication Year 1973
Title Availability of water from limestone and dolomite aquifers in southwest Ohio and the relation of water quality to the regional flow system
DOI 10.3133/wri7317
Authors Stanley Eugene Norris, Richard E. Fidler
Publication Type Report
Publication Subtype USGS Numbered Series
Series Title Water-Resources Investigations Report
Series Number 73-17
Index ID wri7317
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Ohio Water Science Center