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The study of buried drift aquifers in Minnesota by seismic geophysical methods

June 12, 1984

Buried-drift aquifers are stratified sand and (or) gravel aquifers in glacial deposits that cannot be seen or inferred at the land surface. During the Pleistocene Epoch, four continental glaciations advanced and retreated across Minnesota, blanketing the bedrock surface with drift as much as 700 feet thick (fig. 1). Most of the drift consists of till, an unsorted, un-stratified mixture of clay silt, sand, and gravel that usually is not considered to be an aquifer. Permeable, stratified sand and gravel, deposited as outwash, alluvium, and (or) ice-contact deposits usually during an earlier glacial episode and subsequently covered (buried) with till, form the buried-drift aquifers.

Publication Year 1984
Title The study of buried drift aquifers in Minnesota by seismic geophysical methods
DOI 10.3133/70175429
Authors D. G. Woodward
Publication Type Report
Publication Subtype USGS Unnumbered Series
Series Title Open-File Report
Index ID 70175429
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Minnesota Water Science Center