211 106 61MB
English Pages 272 [273] Year 1993
Geochemical
Techniques
for
Identifying
Sources of
Ground-Water Salinization
Bernd C. Richter Charles W. Kreitler
Bert E. Bledsoe EPA
Project Officer
CRC Press Taylor & Francis Croup Boca Raton London New York CRC Press is
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Published 2021
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1993
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ISBN-13: 978-1-56670-000-9
(hbk)
DOI: 10.1201/9780203753668 This book contains information obtained from authentic and
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Funding
for this
project
provided by
was
Robert S. Kerr Environmental Research
Cooperative Agreement
the U. S. Environmental Protection
Laboratory,
Office of Research and
No. CR-815748 to the Bureau of Economic
Texas at Austin. Burt E. Bledsoe
was
EPA
project
reviews.
Geology,
Agency
the information in this document has been funded
Although
Environmental Protection
Agency,
it does not
Development, the
officer. His continued support is
We thank the reviewers from the U. S. Environmental Protection
necessarily
Agency,
University
of
appreciated.
for their
manuscript
wholly by
reflect the views of the
under
the U. S.
Agency
and
no
official endorsement should be inferred.
Manuscript preparation were
drafted
by
was are
edited
were
completed
at the Bureau of Economic
Geology. Figures
Maria Saenz, Tari Weaver, Kerza Prewitt, Jana Robinson, Michele
Margret Koening, typesetting
was
and Joel Lardon under the direction of Richard Dilon. Word
done
by Kitty
by Susan Llyod
Chalstromn and
processing
under the direction of Susann Doenges. The
designed by Margret
LaHaye, and
publication
Evans. The efforts of all these
people
greatly appreciated. Bernd Richter is
America. 78763.
presently traveling, driving
Any comments or questions can be directed to Charles Kreitler is
University of Arizona,
a
professor
where he teaches
in the
his VW bus
the
highways
of
Mr. Richter at P.O. Box 5543, Austin, TX
Department
hydrogeology.
across
of
Hydrology
and Water Resources,
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
This report deals with salt-water sources that
commonly
water. It reviews characteristics of salt-water sources and
used to
identify these
sources
mix and deteriorate fresh
geochemical techniques
sources
of salt water
are
distinguished:
(2) Halite solution, (3) Sea-water intrusion, (4) Oil-and
and
can
be
together, illustrating
which ones are
United States. In separate sections, each
potential
a
step-by-step
(1) Natural saline ground water,
gas-field brines, (5) Agricultural effluents,
(6) Saline seep, and (7) Road salting. The geographic distribution of these
individually
that
after mixing has occurred.
The report is designed to assist investigators of salt-water problems in fashion. Seven major
ground
potential
sources was
sources at any
given
mapped
area in the
source is then discussed in detail
regarding
physical and chemical characteristics, examples of known techniques for identification of mixtures between fresh water and that source, and known occurrences
parameters that
by a
discussion
are used within these
concerning where study
are
presented
and how to obtain them. Also
graphical and statistical methods that references for further
techniques
are used
frequently in
concludes this report.
by state.
Individual geochemical
in a separate section, followed
provided is
a
description
of basic
salt-water studies. An extensive list of
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Executive
Summary
iii
AcknowledgmentsV 1.
1 Introduction
1.1.
Purpose
1.2.
2. 3.
Geographic
and
Use
of
this
Report
1
Background
Distribution of
Major
2
Major Salinization Sources6
Salinization
Sources
17
3.1. Natural Saline Ground Water17 3.1.1.
Mechanism
Different Sources of Naturally
Occurring Salinity22
3.1.2.
Hydrochemistry of
3.1.3.
Examples of Geochemical Studies of Natural Saline Ground Water28
3.1.4.
Significant
3.1.5.
State-by-State
17
Parameters
35
Summary
38
56 3.2. Halite Solution
3.2.5.
3.2.1.
56 Mechanism
3.2.2.
Composition of Halite and other Evaporites5
3.2.3.
Examples of
3.2.4.
Significant
62 Geochemical Studies of Halite Solution
75 Parameters
State-by-State
Summary
of
Halite
Occurrences
75
81 3.3. Sea-Water Intrusion
3.3.1. 3.3.2.
3.3.3.
Mechanism 81 Chemistry
Reaction
3.3.5.
State-by-State
Characteristics
Summary
of
Water
of
Sea-Water
Sea-Water
Oil-Field
3.4.1.
3.4.1a.
3.4.1b. 3.4.1c.
Sea
86
88 Examples of Geochemical Studies of Sea-Water Intrusion
3.3.4.
3.4.
of
Intrusion
Intrusion
Brine
Mechanism
Surface
disposal
109
115
115
117
Injection wells119
Plugged
3.4.2
Oil-Field Brine
3.4.3.
Examples of
and
abandoned
boreholes
Chemistry122
122 Geochemical Studies of Oil- and Gas-Field Brine Pollution
103
119
Parameters132
3.4.4.
Significant
3.4.5.
State-by-State Summary
134 of Oil- and Gas-Field Contamination
142 3.5. Agricultural Sources
3.5.1.
142 Mechanism
3.5.2.
Water Chemistry 147
3.5.3.
Examples of
3.5.4.
Significant
3.5.5.
State-by-State Summary
Geochemical Studies of
of
Agriculturally-Induced
Ground-Water Problems 156
Seep159
3.6. Saline
Mechanism
3.6.2.
Water Chemistry 162
3.6.3.
Examples of
3.6.4.
Significant
3.6.5.
State-by-State Summary
3.7.
Geochemical Studies of Saline
159
Seep163
170 Parameters
of Saline
Seep
Road
Occurrences 172
Salt
3.7.1.
175 Mechanism
3.7.2.
Road-Salt
Chemistry179
3.7.3.
Examples
of Geochemical Studies of Road
3.7.4.
Significant
181 Chemical Parameters
3.7.5.
State-by-State Summary of
175
Salting 180
181 Road-Salt Issues
188 Geochemical Parameters 188 Discussion of Individual Parameters
4.1. 4.2.
5.
149 Salinization
Parameters156
3.6.1.
4.
Agricultural
Summary
Data
Availability
of
Field
Techniques
201
204 and Selection
204 5.1. Sources of Data 209 5.2. Selection of Data Criteria 6.
Graphical
6.1.
6.2.
7.
and
Statistical
Graphical
Statistical
Techniques
211
Techniques
Techniques
211
221
230 References
FIGURES 1.
Map of tha United States showing areas of ground water containing more than 1,000 mg/L total dissolved solids at depths less than 500 ft below land surface 7
2.
Map of the United States showing the approximate extent of halite deposits 8
United States
showing
areas of
potential
9 sea-water intrusion
3.
Map of the
4.
Map of
5.
Major irrigation
6.
Saline-seep
7.
Map of the United States showing amount of road salt used in individual states during the winters of 1966-1967, 1981-1982, and 1982-1983 14
8.
Composite
9.
Relationship
the United States
areas of oil and
11 gas production
in the United States 12
areas
areas in
showing general
13 Montana, North and South Dakota, and Texas
map of potential salinization sources 15 between
ground-water quality
and
recharge-discharge
areas 19
10.
Discharge of regional,
saline
ground water and mixing with local, fresh ground water21
11.
Relationship
between
depth
of
12.
Geochemical composition of
13.
Separation of
14.
Use of bromide, iodide, boron, and chloride concentrations in bivariate plots for identification of salt-water sources 31
15.
Separation
screen
and chloride content in two
ground water in
a
of different
16. 17.
wells 23
gypsum playa, West Texas 27
local recharge water from nonlocal
ground water using
ground-water origins using the
water
adjacent
stable isotopes29
strontium-iodide
relationship
in
ground
32
Ground-water flow directions and salinities in parts of the
Murray Basin,
southwest Australia
33
Differentiation between fresh-water contamination caused by oil-field brines versus brine 34
evaporatively concentrated
ground water in parts
California 36
Natural salinization of
19.
Stable-isotope composition
20.
Solution of halite
21.
Discharge points of halite-solution brine at land surface in the Rolling Plains of north-central Texas and southwestern Oklahoma 59
22.
Bivariate plots of
23.
Classification of
24.
Modified Piper diagrams of chemical composition of brine springs and surface waters in southern Manitoba 64
25.
Comparison of Na/CI weight ratios for oil-field brines and
26.
of
of the San
Joaquin Valley of
18.
ground water affected by evaporation37
by circulating ground water,
major ions
58 Palo Ouro Basin, Texas
and Br/CI ratios versus chloride for natural halite-solution brines
61
oil-field/deep-basin waters according to TDS and bromide concentrations63
brines from salt springs in western Oklahoma and southwestern Kansas 65 Differentiation of oil-field/deep-basin brine from halite-solution brine using bivariate Br/CI weight ratios versus chloride concentrations 67
plots of 27.
Grouping of brine analyses according to molar Na/CI ratios and Br/CI weight ratios typical for halite solution and oil-field/deep-basin brine 69
28.
Bivariate plots of chemical constituents in brines collected from salt springs and shallow test holes in the Rolling Plains of Texas 70
29.
Molar ratios of (Ca+Mg)/So4 versus Na/CI in salt-spring and shallow subsurface brines, Rolling Plains of Texas 71
30.
Relationship between s 18o and CI with depth Texas
in shallow brines in
parts
of the
Rolling Plains, 72
31.
Differentiation between halite-solution waters and oil-field/deep-basin brines using differences in I/CI weight ratios 73
32.
Theoretical mixing curves for fresh water and potential salinization sources in Kansas using sulfate and chloride concentrations 74
33.
Typical ground-water flow patterns along
34.
Schematic cross section showing mixing mechanism of sea water with fresh water through sinkholes and solution openings in a carbonate aquifer 85
35.
coast lines 83
Bivariate
plots of major ions
samples
90
and of Br/CI ratios versus chloride for sea-water intrusion
36.
Increase in chloride concentration with time in coastal wells,
37.
Landward movement of sea water mapped by the position of the 500 mg/L chloride contour in two shallow aquifers, Monterey County, California 94
38.
Piper diagram of
39.
Piper diagram of chemical composition of selected saline waters from the Manhattan Beach area, California 97
40.
Iodide concentrations
41.
Bivariate plot of SO4/CI ratios and SO4 concentrations for coastal saline ground water of southwest Florida 101
42.
Dilution diagrams of major ions with theoretical mixing lines between sea water and local fresh water 104
43.
Relationship between flow regimes and hydrochemical facies in ground water in a big coastal plain105
44.
Geochemical processes and changes in ionic composition along the flow path in a coastal aquifer 106
45.
Map of shallow oil
46.
Schematic diagram illustrating possible communication scenarios between deep saline aquifers and shallow fresh-water units through boreholes 121
47.
Bivariate
48.
Monitoring of chloride concentrations in contamination
chemical
as
composition of coastal
Monterey County,
saline water,
California 93
Monterey County,
California
indicator of residence time 9
120 fields in the United States
plots of major ions
123 and Br/CI ratios versus chloride for oil-field brines
ground water as an
aid in
identifying salt-water
125
49.
50.
Relationship between soil chloride and depth inside and outside an abandoned brine-disposal pit 126 Bivariate plots of major ions versus chloride from water-supply wells and test holes in the of an abandoned brine-disposal pit127
vicinity
using bar graphs,
Stiff
diagrams,
and contouring 129
51.
Identification of salinization sources
52.
Mapping of point source of salinity and the resulting salt-water plume through contouring of chloride concentrations from water wells 130
53.
Determination of fresh
ground
geochemical constituent criteria that indicate
water in
54.
Transport of
salt to
55.
Classification of
parts
brine contamination of
of Oklahoma 133
discharge
areas as a
result of
144 irrigation-retum flow
irrigation water based on sodium-adsorption
ratios and
conductivity 148
95
56.
Increase in TDS concentration in the Arkansas River alluvial aquifer as a result of irrigation-return flow 151
57.
Use of Stiff diagrams for identification of water-quaity changes as a result of agricultural activities 152
58.
Salt content in irrigation water, irrigation runoff and in soil during and after three controlled irrigation experiments 154
59.
Relationship between TDS, Na, CI, Ca+Mg, SO4 and depth in soil under irrigated and
nonirrigated 60.
land 155
Diagrammatic cross
section of
ground-water flow with
saline seep in
topographically
low
areas and in intermediate areas 161
61.
Correlation between SO4 and TDS concentrations in seep waters from the Colorado Group, Montana 164
62.
Relationship between
63.
Summary of
64.
Modified
65.
Piper diagram of
66.
Variation in calcium, magnesium, and sulfate concentrations with chloride concentration in shallow ground water from a two-county area in parts of West Texas 171
67.
Rate of growth of saline seep
68.
Salt
69.
Correlation between increase in salt usage applied to highways and chloride concentrations in ground water, Massachusetts, 1955-1971 178
70.
Bivariate
71.
Location map of ground-water stations for which a chloride value is available at U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's data base STORET 206
72.
Location map of water wells in Texas for which a chloride value is stored at the Texas Natural Resources Information System data bank 207
73.
Graphical illustration of chemical analyses by contouring of individual parameters onto maps and cross sections 212
74.
Presentation of major ions in form of bar graphs, pie charts, Stiff diagrams, and Schoeller diagrams 213
75.
Presentation of chemical constituents on trilinear (Piper) diagram and classification scheme of hydrochemical facies 215
76.
Bivariate
77.
Use of bivariate plots for identification of mixing trends between fresh ground water and potential salinization sources in parts of West Texas 218
78.
Modified Schoeller and
79.
Calculation of mixing percentages between fresh water and salt water using mixing graphs of chloride and bromide 220
80.
saturation states and salinity in well waters affected by saline seep, north-central Montana 165 chemical and transport processes
Piper diagram of
production
plot of
chemical
in
a
saline-seep system 16
composition of ground water in
shallow ground water in two
near
operating
adjacent
saline seeps, Montana
counties of West Texas 169
173 Fort Benton, Montana
and usage of salt for deicing 177
Br/CI ratios versus CI for selected water
plots of
Na versus CI for halite-solution and
samples from northeastern Ohio182
deep-basin
Piper diagrams using concentration
brines 217
ratios as end
points219
Bivariate plots of ratios determined by application of Stepwise Discriminant Analysis as the ratios to distinguish sea-water intrusion from oil-field brines 226
statistically best
167
81. 82.
Bivariate plots of ratios determined by application of Stepwise Discriminant Analysis as the statistically best ratios to distinguish halite-solution brine from oil-field brines 227 Bivariate
plot of Na/CI ratios versus Ca/CI
ratios for Illinois
ground water,
llinois oil-field
brines, and ground water contaminated by oil-field brine 229
TABLES standards established for
inorganic
constituents 3
1.
Drinking-water
2.
Ground-water classification based
3.
60 Mineral composition of salt from domes in Louisiana and Texas
4.
Concentration of
5.
Landward
6.
Changes in chloride concentration between 1977 and 1981 in the Farrington aquifer of New Jersey as a result of sea-water intrusion 91
7.
changes
Changes in intruding
major
on
TDS ranges 4
and some minor chemical constituents in sea water 87
in chemical
composition of Gulf of
Mexico water as
ionic ratios due to ion exchange in relation to the
a
position of
89 result of dilution
the
water 108
8.
Methods of disposal of produced oil- and gas-field brine in the United States during 1963 116
9.
Percentage of
saline and sodic areas in seventeen western states and in Hawaii146
salinity classification in
150 the United States
10.
Soil
11.
Reported use of road salt and abrasives during the winters of 1966-1967, 1981-1982, and 1982-1983 176
12.
189 Geochemical parameters used for identification of salinity sources
13.
Approximate
14.
Description
15.
Listing of constituent
costs of chemical and
isotopic analyses192
208 of literature data bases
ratios that separate best brines from Texas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, California, Ohio, and Canada, as determined through Stepwise Discriminant 225 Analysis
1. INTRODUCTION
1.1.
Purpose
and Use of this
The purpose of this report is to summarize
Report
geochemical techniques
that
can
be used in studies of
salinization of fresh water. The report is designed to assist investigators through detailed discussion of
potentially useful chemical parameters and techniques, characteristics of potential salinization The
topic of
of references
compiled. sources
of
document
of physical and geographical
salt-water contamination has been extensively researched,
compiled for this report.
No
compendium of
a
researcher will have
a
the overall
develop
but to summarize known
ground-water salinity, that
as
sources.
The purpose of this document is not to
so
well
as
new
evidenced
as
has
topic, however,
approaches for all
different
be helpful to
depend
to
a
experienced reference to
geochemical
for
identifying
into
sources
list
been
previously
geochemical techniques
a
single
reference manual that reviews available work.
Salinization of fresh water is perhaps the most widespread threat to ground-water document deals with
by the long
characteristics of the
major known
sources
of
salinity,
resources.
and
as
This
such will
investigators
of salt-water problems. The extent to which this document will be of help will
large degree
on
the
background knowledge
researcher in the field of some
of the known
of the
problem
ground-water quality, this document
techniques
that are
being
and of the
investigator.
To
an
may serve as a summary of and
used. To investigators
new
in this field,
we
suggest the following possible methodology of investigation in combination with this report. Step
1:
The general geographic distribution of major potential salinization sources, that is
(1) natural saline ground water, (2) halite solution, (3) field brines,
Chapter
(5) agricultural effluents, (6)
2 of this
report. Through
source as well as the
idea which any given
potential area
overlap
sea-water
saline seep, and
(7)
intrusion, (4) oil-and gas-
road salt, is addressed in
a series of maps that show the distribution of each
between these sources, the
salinization source
of the country. There
or sources
are some
investigator
exist at her/his local
can
get
area
limitations to the maps,
as
a
general
of interest at discussed in
Chapter 2. Step
2:
After
potential
sources of salt water have been
for a discussion of the sources. This will
background
information about the
discussed in detail,
including
characteristics, geochemical
provide
source(s)
mechanisms of case
identified, Chapter 3 should be consulted the researcher with the necessary
of interest. Each of the seven sources is
mixing
with fresh
For each source,
a
water, chemical
studies, recommended chemical techniques for
identification of salinization caused by these sources, and occurrences.
ground
a
variety of techniques that can
state-by-state summary of be used is
presented.
DOI: 10.1201/9780203753668-1
Each section includes a
state-by-state summary
individual salinization sources. Before absent in the
area
of known
disregarding
problem cases
associated with
any source identified in
Step
2 as
of salinization and of interest, the investigator may want to review all
summaries pertinent to her/his state(s). With the help of references listed in Chapter 7, extensive background information of the problem
Step
3:
After selecting techniques that
geochemical parameters investigator Step
4:
a
techniques Depending
on
the
techniques
likely will on a
parameter
area
selected in
basis
sources, agency
Step
3 may be
existing data can be representative
files,
or
very of
give
the
sampling
helpful
potential
may not be available to the
or
computerized data banks. Some of
applicable using existing data,
samples for parameters
(for example, isotopes). Chapter 5
of data selection and for a discussion on
be
characteristics as well as
of interest, chemical data may
necessitate collection of water
regular
4. This will
Chapter
laboratory analyses.
investigator from published the
useful for the particular problem case, the
of interest should be reviewed in
overview of
general
and costs of
are
be obtained.
can
computerized
but may also be salinization
that
but others most determined
are not
should be consulted for
guidelines
data banks. This step is crucial, as
misleading.
sources can
Chemical
analyses that
may
be found in the referenced
literature.
Step
5:
Once data have been selected from can
be
existing
accomplished using techniques
statistical methods are discussed
briefly
sources or collected in the
selected
in
during Step
Chapter 6. Hopefully,
field, evaluation
2. Useful
graphical
the source of
and
salinity will
then be determined.
1.2. Background All natural waters contain gases,
mixing
some
dissolved minerals
through
with other solutions, and interaction with the
the interaction with
biosphere
and
these processes result in natural waters that contain total dissolved solids
atmospheric and
lithosphere. (TDS)
soil
In many cases,
concentrations above
those recommended for drinking water (Table 1 ). This deterioration of water quality is enhanced
by almost
all human activities through water consumption and contamination.
Salinization, that is, the increase in TDS, is the most widespread form of effect of salinization is
an
water contamination. The
increase in concentrations of specific chemical constituents
as
well
as
in overall
chemical content. A variety of terms have been introduced in the literature to reflect the changing character of the water
as
salinity increases, such
brine (Table 2 ). For the purpose of this report,
(1958),
which is one of the most
widely
as
saline, moderately saline, very saline, brackish, and
we
followed the classification of Robinove and others
used. The term “salinization,"as it will be used in this report,
Table 1. Drinking-water standards established for inorganic consituents (data from Freeze and Cherry, 1989 ). 1979 and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1989). 1979, ,
Recommended concentration limit
Constituent
(mg/L) Total Dissolved Solids
(TDS)
Chloride (Cl) Sulfate (SO4) Nitrate
(NO3)
500.000 250.000 250.000 45.000
Iron (Fe)
0.300
Manganese (Mn) Copper (Cu) Zinc (Zn) Boron (B) Hydrogen Sulfide (H2S)
0.050 1.000 5.000 1.000 0.050 Maximum
permissible
concentration
(mg/L) (As) (Ba) Cadmium (Cd) Chromium (Cr) Selenium (Se) Antimony (Sb)
0.050
Lead (Pb)
0.050
Mercury (Hg) (Ag) Fluoride (F)
0.002
Arsenic Barium
Silver
1.000 0.010 0.050 0.010 0.010
0.050 1.4-2.4
Table 2. Ground-water classification based ranges (in mg/L).
on
TDS
Roblnove and others. 1958: Fresh
Slightly saline Moderately saline Very saline Briny
0
1.000 3.000 10,000 >35,000
-
-
-
-
1,000 TDS 3,000 10,000 35,000
Freeze and Cherry, 1979: Fresh water Brackish water Saline water Brine
0 1,000 TDS 1.000 10,000 10,000 -100,000 >100,000 -
-
indicates an increase in TDS from
Of the variety of
potential
sources of
sulfuric acid, "acid rain”). can
by any
salinity,
Strong
areas
such, salinization may
or
may not
even
anthropogenic.
before it reaches the earth's surface,
winds carry mineral matter and solution droplets (for example,
ocean
be dissolved and incorporated into precipitation. Surface runoff dissolves mineral matter
body, where it
enters the soil is
to additional chemical,
evapotranspiration,
subject
mineral solution and
mixes with water of different chemical
precipitation,
Water-rock interaction and mixing
is often enhanced
by human
are
physical,
and
water
mixing
on
Water that such
as
with other solution.
along flow paths from recharge
the dominant processes.
activities. For example, improper
composition.
biological changes,
solution of gases, and
Changes in chemical composition continue in ground areas.
as
of high sulfur dioxide content in the atmosphere (formation of
its way toward a surface-water
discharge
source. As
some are natural and others are
atmospheric gases and particles
interacts with
reflected in often low pH values in
spray) that
levels
higher than drinking water standards.
cause concentrations
Precipitation
background
areas to
Mixing of different waters
drilling, completion,
and final construction
of wells may create artificial connections between fresh-water aquifers and saline-water aquifers. Pumping of fresh water may toward the
change
directions of
ground-water flow
pumped well; improper waste-disposal
that contaminate natural Some
areas
and may cause encroachment of saline water
activities or
techniques
may introduce artificial solutions
ground water.
of the country experience very little
problems regarding
resources, whereas in other areas most of the available
ground
water is
salinization of fresh-water
saline, reflecting natural and
human-induced degradation. Where such conditions for salinization of fresh water exist is discussed in the
following chapter.
2. GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION OF MAJOR SALINIZATION SOURCES
For the purposes of this report,
seven
major salinization
singled
sources were
They
out.
are,
(1) natural saline ground water, (2) halite solution, (3) sea-water intrusion, (4) oil-and gas-field brines, (5) agricultural effluents, (6) saline seep, and (7) road salt. The geographic distribution of these potential sources and areas of
overlap
between these sources are discussed in this
of each individual source will follow in the next Saline
ground
water
(TDS>1,000 parts
chapter.
A detailed discussion
chapter.
per million
[ppm])
of variable
origin
underlies approximately
two-thirds of the United States (Feth and others, 1965). It may be encountered in water wells that drilled too deep for local conditions and it is
a
threat to those wells that
rate to induce salt-water flow toward the well. Shown in are
figure
are
pumped
at a
at
1 are those areas where TDS concentrations
depths, the cut-off value of 500 ft
areas
was
wherever wells
are
pumped
at
high
rates and from great
from Feth and others (1965) because the search for
adopted
usable ground water (and with it drilling activities to greater depths) may be greatest in fresh water is available. Conditions may change in the future
ground
occur, but
depths greater than 500 ft below land surface (Feth and others, 1965). Although the potential
of salinization exists in these outside
or
may be different
locally,
where less
areas as
the demand for
water increases.
Many sedimentary basins salt domes that
sufficiently high
greater than 1,000 ppm within 500 ft of land surface. Outside these areas, saline water does
generally
were
are at
(Fig. 2). Some
are
of these
known to contain
large deposits of
deposits occur at great depths,
rock salt in the form of salt beds or
such as those in southernmost Florida
greater depths than 10,000 ft below land surface. Others
occur close to land
surface, such
as
those in parts of Utah ( Dunrud and Nevins, 1981 ). Shallow occurrences of salt in Texas, Louisiana,
Alabama, and Mississippi along the Gulf of Mexico millions of years old indicates
ground water comes especially
a
are
due to salt diapirism. The presence of salt deposits
relatively high stability,
into contact with salt
deposits, often
that is, little contact with ground water. Where enhanced
by heavy drilling
in salt-dome areas, solution of salt and salinization of local
shallower the salt are considered
deposit, the higher the potential of
potential
Where coastal
salinization sources,
aquifers
are
ground
as a
result of
high
mining activities,
waters will
regardless of the depth
or
where
pumping
deposits
of occurrence.
interconnected with the open ocean, sea-water intrusion
sea-water levels,
or
is
intruding
induces landward flow of
can occur.
into coastal
sea
water, the
potential of well-water salinization exists. For the purpose of this report, all coastlines of the country considered
scale,
potential
intrusion areas,
some coastal areas can
regardless
probably
be
of the nature of the coastal
disregarded
The
occur.
fresh-water salinization. In this report, all salt
Where formation water hasn't been flushed out, where sea-water has intruded
aquifers
and
as a source of
aquifer ( Fig. 3 ).
were
On a local
salinity, especially where ground-
water pumpage is low.
DOI: 10.1201/9780203753668-2
Figure 1. Map of the United States showing areas of ground water containing more than 1,000 mg/L total dissolved solids at depths less than 500 ft below land surface (data from Feth and others, 1965).
Figure 3. Map of
the United States
showing
areas
of
potential
sea-water intrusion.
Associated with the
of oil and gas is the creation of avenues for water
exploration
great depths into the shallow subsurface. Subsequent production brings huge land surface. These drilling activities and the disposal of these brines hazards in the country. Parts of 25 producing states
are
from
migration
amounts of brine to the
of the biggest salinization
are some
potentially affected by this hazard,
mapped by
as
the general distribution of oil and gas fields in the United States (Fig. 4 ). Salinization as pose a
result of
evapotranspiration
enhanced by
agricultural
activities is found all over the country.
threat in the western half of the United States
potential
and where
a
agriculture
( Fig. 5 ),
rates and salt contents in soil are
where
Irrigation-return
precipitation
rates are low
Another salinization
high.
waters
source
is dryland saline seep. Terracing of land and destruction of natural vegetation
caused this phenomenon in several states,
resulting
in the salinization of soil and
Weather conditions favor concentration of road
( Fig. 7 ). There, millions of tons of salt
are
applied to
salting
ground water ( Fig. 6 ).
in the northeastern part of the country
roads each winter,
imposing
a salinization threat to
soil, plants, and surface and ground water in the vicinity of highways.
Mapping sources of
of
potential
salinity
at any
salinization sources, as done in
particular
area in the
figures
1
through
country. By overlaying all
7 is ,
helpful
In
determining variety
seven sources, a
of
combinations between these sources becomes evident. This large variety complicates generic
approaches
depending sources
to salt-water on
the kind of combination of sources involved. In addition, not
change from
the same
studies, because salt-water characteristics change considerably from
everywhere, greatly increasing
or
sources
the number of
sources. In
be easier than in other parts, where three
Limitations that should be
does not
composite
combinations of
kept
necessarily
potential
applicability
in mind when
sources discussed in this
an
actual salinization
source
could
through 8 ) presented
here.
sources exist.
of the maps
( Figs.
1
selecting or eliminating potential
report were mapped; (2)
indicate that the source
these sources may be felt away from the
actively
point
of
the sole presence of a
contributes to any
origin; (4)
sources at any
changed since originally mapped. Not included sources, such as sewer
areas of occurrence were
or
more
effects of
generalized
with
sources may have
mining
areas, all of which
complicated and would have resulted in
small areas of overlap. Also, chemical characteristics of these sources vary to a ones
source
in some areas. These sources were not considered because
large-scale regional mapping would have been
the
potential
area
on these maps are some other known salinization
systems, thermal springs, waste-disposal facilities,
ground-water salinization
given
salinity problem; (3)
approximated boundaries; and (5) the known distribution of potential salinization
may contribute to
possible mixing
map ( Fig. 8 ) of the above-mentioned
these areas, identification of
or more
There are several limitations to the
(1) only the
potential
indicates, approximately three-quarters of the country could possibly be affected by two
less than two of the selected
are
the potential salinization
area to area, but also the chemical characteristics of individual sources may not be
between fresh-water and salt-water sources. As the
potential
only
area to area
even more
higher degree locally than
discussed here, which would have complicated the discussion even further. The
seven
Figure
4.
PennWell
Map of the United States showing general Publishing Co., 1982).
areas
of oil and gas production (modified from
Figure 5. Major irrigation
areas in the
United States (moditied from Geraghty and others, 1973).
Figure 6. Saline-seep areas in Montana, North and South Dakota, and Texas (data trom Bahls and Miller, 1975 and Neffendort, 1978). ,
Figure 7. Map of the United States showing amount of road salt (in thousands of tons) used in individual states during the winters of 1966-1967, 1981-1982, and 1982-1983 (data from Field and others, 1973; Salt Institute, undated).
Figure
8.
Composite map of potential salinization
sources as
mapped in figures
1
through
7
.
potential
conditions. For
may or may not be active at any area,
mapped
sources
oil-field activities
example,
imply that either cause salinity of ground states with a
long history
year in 1966)
was
area
of road-salt use
salinity,
or
value of
(cut-off
for reasons of simplicity, only those
greater than 30,000
tons of road salt use per
exists in
applied
an area
a
problem,
where
here, either transport of salt water from
a
no
every
potential
storage
area or
a
problem
now or
a
in
source in that area should be considered. If
potential salinization source
bordering
a
less than 30,000 tons per year at that time is not
that increased usage in some other states may not pose
ground-water salinity is
salinity problem
specific area. Also,
used in the overlap map of figure 8. This should not imply that, for example,
source of
the future. If
natural and human-induced
the presence of halite in the subsurface don't necessarily
water in a
of road salt in any of the states that
potential
a
or
depending on
from
is indicated
a source not
on
figures presented
covered in this report should
be considered. It also should be kept in mind that some of the base maps used in constructing these maps
are
up to 30 years old, and may be somewhat outdated
regarding the present
these sources on a local basis. In any case, these maps should idea of
potential
sources
involved, after which available maps with
The scale factor alone should make it should be in this
mapped
report. The
following chapter.
at the
probably
imperative
beginning of each
sources
mapped
that the
salinization
in this
chapter
only
to
get
of any of
a
general
more local detail should be consulted.
geographic
study using
be used
occurrence
distribution of salinization sources
local maps instead of maps
will be discussed
presented
individually and in detail in the
3. MAJOR SALINIZATION SOURCES As discussed in the introduction
country. Some of these
are more
judged
sources
of salinization sources exists
variety
a
dominant than others, and
place but not in another, depending salinization
chapter,
as most
on
individually
sources
may be active in
natural conditions and changes induced by
important
regional level
on a
are
throughout man.
the
some
Individual
(1) naturally occurring saline ground
water, (2) halite solution, (3) sea-water intrusion, (4) oil-field and gas-field brines, (5) agricultural byand
products
techniques, (6) saline
seep, and
(7)
road salt.
Each section on individual salinization sources is divided into
(1)
a discussion of the mechanism of
contamination, (2) the chemical composition of the salinity source, (3) examples of geochemical studies that
were
that
are
source.
conducted to
identify
commonly used This way,
various salinity
complexity
a
the
specific salinity
to trace the
respective
researcher is provided with
sources.
(4) the most significant chemical parameters
source, and
an
A cookbook approach for
of local contamination and
source,
(5)
salinity,
the
Although comprehensive,
identifying salinity
hydrogeology precludes
Local have
sources a
hydrogeologic setting, the
of reference for the
following
state-by-state summary of the salinity
in-depth review of geochemical methods for identifying
the information contained in a section, a researcher needs to based on the type of
a
a
sources is not followed because the
step-by-step approach.
develop
his/her own
and the type of data and
After
reviewing
hydrochemical
budget
criteria
available.
discussion of safinization sources cannot be complete.
of interest should be incorporated by the researcher, who should
area
general understanding of ground-water conditions in
the area.
3.1. Natural Saline Ground Water
3.1.1. Mechanism Natural saline
ground water,
as used for this
manual, is regionally occurring saline ground water that
underlies fresh-water aquifers. This chapter deals with natural
pumping-induced mixing between ground
water
saline
boreholes drilled
along
ground water and fresh water,
through
ground
and with oil-field brine
ground water, with
and the upward
migration of saline
(see chapter 3.2),
production (see chapter 3.4),
waters. Chemical characteristics of
saline
the fresh-water section into the salt-water section. Not
discussed is salinization associated with solution of halite
chapter 3.3),
discharge of such
deep-basinal
with sea-water intrusion
all of which also deal with natural saline
formation brines are similar or identical to most
brines produced from oil and gas reservoirs. The nature of occurrence in salt-water
however,
as
contamination
migration pathways, result of natural or
by oil-field brines
involves
whereas contamination
pumping-induced
(see
probX
pumping and disposal of brine or crc
by deep-basin
brines involves subsurface
jI
migration
as a
conditions. This difference in mechanisms of contamination but
DOI: 10.1201/9780203753668-3
similarity in chemical
characteristics creates some
in the discussion of natural saline
overlap
in this section and the discussion of oil-field brines in
chapter 3.4.
Saline ground water underlies the country at variable depths. Some
ground water, whereas in other
areas
ground water
don't contain any fresh
areas
thick fresh-water aquifers overly saline ground water. For example,
little or no saline water is known to occur within 1,000 ft of land surface in most of Nebraska and
whereas in
some
other states, such
less than 500 ft below land surface overlies shallow saline water, Iowa
almost the entire state
throughout
major problems of
no
salt-water
The occurrence of saline ground water is dependent
can be residual
(connate)
or
nature of
uses
on a
discharge
water from the time of
as
conductivities
low.
are
Typically,
below land surface as chemical reactions with increase. Ground water in
discharge
areas
because of water-rock interactions and In some
an
variety of factors, including distribution
origin of
natural saline
by evapotranspiration, by precipitation through
settings, especially in
natural
aquifer
typically is
salinity
in
ground
ground
water
intrusion of sea
time.
material, resident time, and of lower quality than
possible mixing with
and others,
(Geraghty
Evaporation
by transpiration
southwestern states. Woessner and others from 2,000
mg/L to 11,000 mg/L in
accumulates in the soil areas
during
the
low and
mixing
ground water in recharge
saline water along the flow
depth
of different waters areas
path ( Fig. 9 ).
the western half of the United States, salts may be concentrated in the
1973). Significant recharge pulses
is enhanced
Relatively
are
water increases with
shallow subsurface due to evaporation rates that exceed precipitation by up to
a
of water
by plants,
order of magnitude
which is a serious problem in several
(1984) reported that phreatophytes can
single growing
growing
one
may dissolve this salt and flush it into ground
season in
season, from 403
parts of Arizona and mg/kg
to 28,177
cause TDS increases
Nevada. The salt that
mg/kg,
is flushed toward
during major recharge periods.
Many ground-water basins in the western United States
are
closed. In those basins, natural recharge
along the surrounding highlands flows toward the basin centers. Along the flow path, ground dissolves mineral matter, areas.
in
any mixture of the above. Residual saline water is not found very often within the shallow
hydraulic
discharge
as
New Mexico, where
young coastal aquifers may still contain pockets of connate water where hydraulic gradients
water.
such
in a saline environment, solution of mineral
deposition
subsurface because of the normal flushing of formation water
where
fresh water
(Ong, 1988).
areas. The
matter in the unsaturated and saturated zones, concentration or
plenty of
and recharge rates, type of soil and aquifer material,
precipitation, evapotranspiration
residence time and flow velocities,
water,
Where
mixing with fresh water may occur,
estimated 75 percent of all ground water is too saline for most
and rates of
( Fig. 1 ).
and others, 1986). Other areas may not be so fortunate, such
(Atkinson
Missouri,
Indiana, Ohio, and North Dakota, saline water is encountered at
as
Evaporation in the
resulting in basins and
process in the
development
settings (Boyd
and Kreitler, 1986).
a
general increase in
recharge
areas to
discharge
in salt flats in the center of the basins is the most influential
especially
of the chemical
TDS content from
water
composition
Evaporation
of the shallow, saline
and mineral
ground
precipitation concentrate
the
water in these
ground
water to
9. Relationship between ground-water quality and recharge-discharge areas (from Kantrowitz, 1970 ). Solution of aquifer material and evapotranspiration in discharge areas commonly cause waterquality deterioration along the flow path.
Figure
the
composition
(Hunt
of a
and others,
Lake in
Na-Mg-SO4-CI-type brine,
1966),
Oregon (Jones
noted for
and Sierra Nevada Basin
Deep Springs
(Garrels
Lake
and MacKenzie,
(Jones, 1965), 1967)
Death
California,
in
Valley
for Abert
and others, 1969), for Teels Marsh in Nevada ( Drever, 1982 ), and for the northern
Salt Basin of West Texas ( Boyd and Kreitler, 1986 ). Surface water that accumulates at topographically low areas in
the center of the basins is often concentrated by evaporation. Infiltration of these concentrated
waters can reach the water table and cause severe
which
are now
which
high
of low
permeabilities, of
these salts may have been water
good-quality ground depleted
water sources are
can
Barton
(1971)
.
(1961)
settings
during
Because
under natural conditions.
lead to inflow of these saline ground waters,
or
ground
as
fresh-
water occurs where salt water from saline
(b) mixes with fresh
water in the subsurface,
at many localities in the United States, such as in New York
reported
Ward
by
in these
deposits.
lacustrine
areas
and waters are drained out oflow-permeable units.
aquifers (a) discharges at land surface have been
low-permeable,
preserved
Natural contamination of fresh water by saline
Oklahoma
In the western United States, many
drained by major river systems may have been under closed conditions in the past,
concentrations of residual salt were left behind in
Overpumpage
springs
pollution.
,
in Texas
by
Richter and Kreitler
(a)
by Crain (1969)
or in Arizona
(1986a,b),
Some of these natural springs contain TDS of up to 300,000 mg/L
Natural saline
by
,
in
Fuhriman and
result of solution of
as a
halite in the shallow subsurface (see also chapter 3.2.). Geothermal springs associated with fault
zones or
volcanic activity
nonpoint
are
contamination, such
often mineralized. In other areas, saline-water discharge
as
along the Colorado River, where more than 50 percent of the average annual 10.7
million tons of salt is contributed
by diffuse
seepage ( U.S.
Department
of
Agriculture,
others, 1986). (b) Mixing of saline ground water and fresh recharge water
regional
and local
aquifer systems,
Mississippian formations in
and others, 1989). Fresh-water and salt-water facies are
nongeological time scale,
water. Drawdown of the water table or the
contamination of wells after some time of
through
discharge
is
depression
pumping. Mixing
central Missouri ( Fig. 10 ) a zone
may vary in response to
mostly
in response to
potentiometric surface in
this interface moves to within the cone of
occur
occurs in
generally separated by
position of this mixing or transition zone
flow component, which, on a
1975 ; Atkinson and areas of
such as in the outcrop areas of Permian formations in north-central
Texas ( Core Laboratories, Inc., 1972 ) and of
variable thickness. The
occurs as
some
heavy
(Banner
of mixing of
changes in
either
pumpage of fresh
aquifer systems
is
so severe
of individual wells or well fields,
that
resulting
in
between fresh water and saline water can also
any type of boreholes that penetrate and are open to both types of waters. If heads in the
fresh-water unit are water heads are
higher than
in the salt-water unit, fresh-water will drain into the saline formation. If salt-
higher than fresh-water heads, contamination of
an entire
aquifer in
the vicinity of the well
may occur. Intermittent
pumping of wells
within the cone of
subsequent
depression.
can lead to
Oxidation of
solution of iron and sulfate
changes
pyrite
during the
in water
quality associated with
within the cone
during pumping
chemical reactions
of the well and the
recovery of water levels to prepumping levels when the
Figure 10. Discharge of regional, saline ground water and mixing with local, fresh ground water. Meteoric recharge in the Front Range of Colorado acquires high salt contents from Permian evaporites under the High Plains aquifer along its flow path to recharge areas in central Missouri, where it mixes with local meteoric, fresh ground water (modified from Banner and others, 1989).
well is not
Changes in water
(Fig.
pumped,
often leads to
water quality
high
iron and sulfate concentrations in well waters
during pumping
may also
depend on the depth of
(Custodio, 1987).
the well. For example, in
a
salt-
study in Arkansas, Morris and Bush (1986) sampled two adjacent wells of different total well depths
11a ). Over
time, chloride
content increased in the shallow well and decreased in the
deep well ( Fig.
11b ). The increase in the shallow well suggested inflow of deep saline water, whereas the decrease in chloride in the deep well suggested inflow of fresh water (Morris and Bush, 1986 ). 3.1.2.
Hydrochemistry of
Nearly geochemical as
all
Different Sources of
environments may contain
geologic
some
as
very high in deep-basin brines,
as
often contain
other brines, such The
origin
sometimes
as
as
are
resulting
typically
waters associated with saline
major anion. Calcium concentrations
of NaCI and
entirely
unusually high
from
have chloride
are
sometimes
TDS concentrations approach several hundreds of thousands
These brines are comprised almost
deposits
saline waters
the dominant cation. Exceptions
salt flats, which often have sulfate
saline water
naturally-occurring
geologic setting. Natural, highly
processes within each
the dominant anion and sodium
seep and
Naturally Occurring Salinity
mg/L.
Natural brines associated with mineral
CaCI2.
concentrations of ions that are
normally
not concentrated in most
Cu, Zn, Ni, Co, Mb, Pb, or Ag.
of the chemical
disputed. Depending
composition on
the
composition of saline water may differ, Basin waters often
are
of brines in
hydrologic
as outlined
referred to
as
ground
water that
basins is
widely
discussed and
environment of each respective basin, the chemical
by Kreitler (1989) :
either connate, meteoric,
"connate" is defined for this paper as water that “meteoric” indicates
sedimentary
was
originated
trapped
or a
mixture of both. The term
at the time of sedimentation. The term
as continental
precipitation. By definition,
the age
of connate waters coincides with the age of the host sediments. Basinal waters of meteoric
origin
younger than the host sediments.
of marine
Though
sediments, formation waters generally do concentration.
greater than
Many
most basins are
composed predominantly
not resemble sea water in either chemical
composition
basins contain waters with total dissolved solid concentrations
sea water concentrations and as
section of the Gulf Coast Basin are
high
as
are
or
significantly
400,000 ppm. Maximum salinities in the Tertiary
approximately 130,000
ppm; in the East Texas Basin, 260,000
ppm; in the Palo Duro Basin, 250,000 ppm; in the Illinois Basin, 200,000 ppm; in the Alberta Basin,
300,000 ppm; and in the Michigan Basin, 400,000 ppm ( Bassett and Bentley, 1983 ; Hanor, 1983). Two different types of brines are generally found,
a
Na-CI brine and a Na-Ca-CI brine, neither
having
chemical composition ratios similar to sea water. In recent years, three mechanism have been used to
explain
the
chemical composition of the brines (Hanor, 1983) (1) the brines solutions left after the
precipitation
high
ionic concentrations and the
originated
as
residual bittern brine
of evaporites; (2) basinal waters have dissolved halite that was
Figure 11. Relationship between depth of screen and chloride content in two adjacent wells (from Morris and Bush, 1986). (a) Pumpage-induced changes in flow directions cause upward migration of saline water into fresh water in well No. 178 and downward migration of fresh water into saline water in well No. 177, resulting in (b) water-quality deterioration and improvement, respectively.
present
shales (reverse
permeability
At present, there is to the
salt; and (3) basinal waters have been forced through low-
as either bedded or domal
a brine on the
osmosis), leaving
no consensus
about the relative importance of each of these three mechanisms
origin of brine.
The theory of salt sieving (reverse osmosis)
the
on
clay-mineral
clay layers, maybe
first introduced by DeSitter (1947)
was
compaction, and in response to flow through tightly charges
side of the membrane.
high-pressured
packed
clays, anions
surfaces (membrane effect), whereas
in a
This way, chloride as well
large,
exchange
multivalent cations and
During
repelled from negative
are
positively charged
fashion moving from one cation
stepwise
.
ions may pass
through
site to the next (Atkinson
heavy isotopes
tend to be
and others,
1986).
enriched
the high-pressure side of the membrane. Schwartz (1974) proposed that this process may
on
as
also be active at relatively shallow depths in parts of Canada, across
residual effective stress conditions
till layers. According to Land (1987), opponents of the salt-sieving theory note that (a) sufficient
pressure
gradients
may not be
doesn't appear to conform to observed in similar source
involving
of salinity
settings.
are
in nature,
generated
and (c)
expected patterns,
Instead of the
(b) the chemistry of brines in shale-rich sections wide
a
salt-sieving theory,
of formation-water types
variety
Land (1987 ) suggested that the
evaporite deposits. Evaporites have always been deposited
Increasingly
MacKenzie
estimated that present evaporites have been dissolved and
(1971)
primary
through geologic
time
in progressively older rocks, suggesting dissolution. Garrels and
but have become
rarer
are
in
the last three billion years,
resulting
subsurface may be the best
explanation
an
cycle
average
for (a) this
precipitated
15 times in
of 200 million years. Dissolution of salt in the
relatively
short
the
cycle, (b)
missing
salt in older rock
formations, and (c) the abundance of sedimentary basin brines (Land, 1987). In addition to evaporite solution, mineral equilibria control the overall composition of brines. Sodium and calcium most dominant cations in almost all brines because and
K-feldspar
result in sodium dominance
and dolomite result in calcium dominance other constituents in brines, Land the
over over
equilibrium
conditions between
far the
Na-feldspar (albite)
potassium, and equilibrium conditions between calcite magnesium (Helgeson, 1972; Land, 1987). To explain
(1987) proposed
two types of rock-water interaction, one occurring in
and the other
occurring
in the basement
The massive destruction of detrital
feldspar
releases
sedimentary basin itself
by
are
underlying
significant
the
sedimentary
amounts of calcium,
basin.
potassium,
strontium, barium, lithium, etc., to solution. Feldspar equilibria prove that large amounts of potassium cannot remain in solution until temperatures reach very consumed in the formation of diagenetic illitic day from
1979). The strontium and barium contained in brines
a
high values,
and
potassium
is
commonly
smectitic precursor (Schmidt and McDonald,
are known to be
vastly
more abundant than
predicted simply by the evaporation of seawater, and the 87Sr/86Sr ratio of the brine is commonly elevated. 87Sr is produced by the decay of 87Rb, an element characteristic of silicate phases, especially K-feldspar. Thus, significant is proven. Other
isotope ratios,
involvement of silicate
such as
18O/16O (Clayton
phases
in
and others,
determining 1966)
brine
chemistry
and D/H (Yeh, 1980)
are shifted from the values
expected
for surficial seawater-derived brines,
additional
providing
evidence for extensive rock-water interaction in the subsurface. It is well known that fluid inclusions in minerals of
commonly
very saline ( Roedder, 1984 ).
which carbon dioxide and water
hydrothermal, metamorphic,
Metamorphism
is
or
igneous origin
are
accompanied by devolatilization, during
released, presumably to overlying sediments. The formation of
are
slaty cleavage during low-grade metamorphism apparently requires the loss of large volumes of the rocks themselves ( Buetner and Charles, 1982 ). The loss of appreciable volumes of insoluble
components, such addition to such
SiO2 and Al2O3
at the Earth’s surface are
the H/Na of a solution in
example,
of magnitude
means that
over
they must
reaction sequence is
increases with
inorganic
as
sources
nearly two
orders
one
possible
metamorphic reactions into the overlying Ca-enriched solutions and
generating
reason
why the
of natural gasses
CO2 content 13C/12C ratio
in natural gas also
more carbon is
apparently derived
and Land, 1986). The
13C with increasing CO2 content as
In
CO2.
opposed to organic sources.
Occurrences of brines in
possible
albite and kaolinite increases
water lost from
increasing depth (Lundegard
tends to become enriched in from
strata. In
the temperature interval 25 to 200°C (Helgeson, 1972). In solutions dominated by
sediments will be neutralized by minerals like calcite, a
overlying
progressively replaced by cations during metamorphism.
equilibrium with
chloride, weak HCI is thus produced. Acid
fact, such
be transported into
material transport, the protons which are bound in alumino-silicates
large-scale
during weathering For
as
suggested
igneous
rocks may be of multiple origin,
in the literature. Edmunds and others
as
(1987)
suggested by list the
a
long list of
following
modes of
possible origin: (1) marine transgression and subsequent concentration (for example, Frape and Fritz, 1982 ),
(2) migration fluids
hydrothermal
of
sedimentary
(for example,
basin brines
Alderton and
(for example, Grigsby and others, 1983), (5) (for example,
(for example,
Sheppard,
silicate mineral
Edmunds and others, 1984, 1985;
Frape
1977 ),
Fritz and
(4)
Frape,
dissolution of
hydrolysis and and others,
1982 ),
(3)
residual
grain-boundary
salts
related water-rock interactions
1984), (6)
breakdown of fluid
inclusions in quartz and other minerals (for example, Nordstrom, 1983 ), and (7) radiolytic decomposition of water
during
a-series decay (Vovk, 1981 ). Some of these processes
concentrations of up to 550,000
mg/L
TDS
( Vovk,
extensive list of chemical reactions to the above list to of Cornwall, United
are
believed to have caused brine
1981 ). Edmunds and others
(1987)
added
explain the origin of saline ground water in
Kingdom. Eliminating ancient sea water as a potential source
(δ18O andδD
a
an
granite
indicated
a
local, meteoric origin), chemical reactions along the flow paths down to approximately 4,000 ft and at temperatures reaching 131°F (55°C)
can
Some results of these chemical reactions
origin of ground-water salinity, (b) zoned
plagioclase, (c) high
explain are:
these saline waters
having
TDS of up to 19,300
(a) acid hydrolysis of plagioclase and biotite
enriched Ca/Na ratios
by selective
as
mg/L.
the prinicipal
reaction of the more calcic centers of
lithium concentrations related to biotite reaction, and
(d) high
Cl
concentrations as a result of
hydroxyl exchange
for Cl in the biotite
interlayer (Edmunds
and others,
1987). Evaporation from
a
shallow water table (within three
or
four feet of land
surface)
can
lead to
high
salt
concentrations in soils. This is known to have occurred in the San Joaquin Valley of California. There,
ground-water salinity
in Coast
molybdenum, vanadium, that accounts for
high
Range alluvium
and boron ( Deverel and Gallanthine, 1989 ).
Evaporation
is the major process
salinities in some closed basins in the western half of the United States.
processes and selective mineral further.
be correlated with high concentrations of selenium,
can
Major inorganic
precipitations modify
reactions in such
settings
the chemical are
silicate
composition
Weathering
of closed-basin waters
hydrolysis, uptake
of
CO2
from the
atmosphere and/or of sulfate from oxidation of sulfides, and precipitation of alkaline earth compounds (Jones, 1965). Concentration ratios of major chemical constituents brines than in most
deep-basin brines,
the latter
are much less uniform in closed-basin
being nearly exclusively
Na-Ca-CI dominated. Closed-
basin brines may be (1) chloride dominated, such as those in the Bonneville Basin,
dominated, such
as those in Alkali
Valley, Oregon,
or
(3)
(2)
sulfate dominated, such as those of the
Desert ( Jones, 1965 ). These differences are due to differences in inflow characteristics and reactions
although,
carbonate
in most instances, increased salinization
(evaporation)
Mojave
precipitation
is associated with
a
trend
toward Cl dominance until halite precipitation is reached. Closed-basin brines start out by simply dissolving
readily soluble mineral compounds, such fluids may be another process that
subsequent evaporative processes that
as
halite.
provides
Leaching
of absorbed ions
the
of trapped interstitial
dissolved minerals to the water. Silicate hydrolysis and
concentration is the source of some of the
subsequently change
or
composition
high
of the waters are:
carbonate contents. Other
mixing
with other water types,
CO2 addition by organic activity at lake bottoms or interstitially in lacustrine sediments, organic matter,
and loss of sulfate
(Jones, 1965).
anaerobic
decay of
As the waters increase in concentration due to
evaporation, precipitation reactions induce major changes to concentrations of individual ions. Calcium carbonate
precipitates first,
as described
simultaneously, carbonates
followed
precipitate
by
by
gypsum, and
finally by alkali
salts. These processes can
Hunt (1960) and Jones (1965) for the Death
Valley
happen
salt pan. There,
in the outermost areas, sulfates in the intermediate zones, and chlorides at the
center. Ground-water evolution in closed basins may be similar to any other evolution from a low-TDS,
Na-Ca-HCO3 recharge water to a high TDS,
calcite dissolution and near
induce radical evolution of
a
changes
in the water type.
Ca-SO4 recharge
evolution included
discharge
areas,
Boyd
mixing
path,
and
evaporation
in
as
discharge areas
between this recharge water and brine may
and Kreitler (1986) demonstrated the
water to a Na-CI brine in a gypsum
precipitation of calcite,
the flow
Na-CI water, as a result of reactions such
precipitation, cation exchange on clay minerals,
the center of the basins. In
along
gypsum, and dolomite.
playa
geochemical
in West Texas (Fig. 12 ). Brine
Figure 12. Geochemical composition of ground water in a gypsum playa, West Texas. Ground water evolves from a Ca-SO4 type in recharge areas to a Na-CI type in discharge areas (salt flat) (from Boyd and Kreitler, 1986 ).
In many areas of the United States, cases, these waters are
temperatures and
at
hydrothermal
in mineral content as a result of increased mineral reactions at elevated
high
large depths from which these
geothermal systems have been found physical
more
waters are found close to or at land surface. In some
waters
originate. Stable isotope compositions
recharge of local meteoric waters, modified by
to reflect
3.1.3.
for
Bradys
Hot
Springs,
a case
a
single potential
used chloride concentrations and temperature values to
open boreholes
or
County,
along
average
background
Florida.
Upward flow
source of salt water,
identify deep,
in that
natural fault and fracture systems.
inflow of saline water in the
Glynn County
levels of 23
fresh-water zones was the concentration (evaporation)
mg/L to
cause as
the
area of
area
Georgia by an
several hundreds of
of intrusion. source
Sowayan
In parts of West Texas, natural and sources are
anthropogenic
associated with oil- and
natural salinization is associated with shallow
as
the source of
is possible through either abandoned, Wait and
Gregg (1973)
identified
increase in chloride concentration from
mg/L. There, heavy pumpage from and
of saline water in
absence of other possible salt-water sources, such as brines,
and others (1972)
Sproul
artesian salt water
Similarly,
a
Allayla (1989)
shallow
identified progressive
part of Saudi Arabia by plotting sodium
concentrations versus chloride concentrations. This was indicated
anthropogenic
reported by Welch and Preissler
Studies of Natural Saline Ground Water
of salt-water intrusion from
intrusion in parts of Lee
as
Nevada.
Examples of Geochemical In
one or
chemical processes (Truesdell, 1976 ; in Welch and Preissler, 1986). One of these
or
processes may be evaporation at land surface prior to infiltration,
(1986)
in most
by
a
slope of
near
unity and the general
evaporite deposits, or geothermal springs.
salinization sources are common. Some of the
gas-field operations
or
agricultural techniques
evaporite deposits, discharge of
while
saline formation water, and
high evapotranspiration rates. Richter and Kreitler (1986a,b) and Richter and others (1990) used major cations and anions, the minor constituents Br and I, and the sulfur-34 to
distinguish
between these sources.
local recharge from nonlocal from
deep-basin discharge.
such as I/CI,
recharge (Fig.
isotopes oxygen-18, deuterium,
and deuterium concentrations separated
Oxygen-18
13 ) and Br/CI and Na/CI ratios
These two sources also were differentiated
Mg/CI, K/CI, Ca/CI,
and
(Ca+Mg)/SO4 (see
also
and
separated
natural halite solution
clearly by other constituent ratios,
chapter 3.2).
The same constituents have
been used in Oklahoma and Kansas to differentiate natural halite solution from oil-field brines
(for
example, Ward, 1961 Leonard, 1964 Whittemore and Pollock, 1979 Gogel, 1981 and Whittemore, ,
1984
,
,
1988 ). The concept of local and nonlocal
isotopes
was
also used
Missouri are much
According to
by Banner
and others
lighter than typical for Missouri recharge water picks up high
recharge
reflected in oxygen and
(1989). Isotopic
hydrogen
stable
concentrations in saline waters of central
rain water, which suggested
a source
further to the west.
Colorado is the most
likely area of recharge for
salt contents from Permian salts
(indicated by Br/CI ratios)
Banner and others (1989), the Front
these waters. This
,
,
Range of
water from nonlocal ground water using the stable isotope ratios the meteoric water line at the composition of local precipitation (open dots and open triangles), whereas nonlocally derived ground water typically is either enriched or depleted in isotopes compared to local precipitation (solid dots) (from Richter and Kreitler, 1986b).
Figure
13.
Separation
of local
recharge
δ8O and δD. Locally recharged ground water plots along
underlying water
or
finally
mixes with fresh water near
intensive interaction of
possible ground
Kansas and
sources
water were
plots of Br/CI
were
saline
water intrusion
sea water
and in local host rock. Bivariate
are
a
of salt-water contamination in parts of Arkansas (Fig. 14 ).
source
(1985)
demonstrated the use of strontium and iodine concentrations for
ground water in
plotted on
off this dilution line
aquifer
also used by Morris and Bush (1986) in combination with plots of l/CI and B/CI to
and Heathcote
differentiating
water with
significantly different from those in Paleozoic
identify deep formation water as the
Lloyd
material were
precluded by these authors as isotopic compositions of 87Sr/86Sr and 144Nd (Neodymium) in
ground
of salinity because
areas in central Missouri. Ancient sea
discharge
the Lima Basin alluvial
dilution line between
ocean
aquifer,
Peru. Saline water derived from sea-
water and alluvial water
associated with inflow from saline
Waters that
(Rg. 15).
One of these is characterized
aquifers.
plot Sr
by
enrichment and the other is associated with iodine enrichment. Saline
playas
and gypsum flats
natural
are
western United States (Boyd and Kreitler, 1986 ). of southeastern Australia. Saline
TDS, appears to be relict
discharge
They
also
occur
water in that area,
ground
sea water with
changes
of closed basins in many parts of the
areas
elsewhere, such
ranging
in concentrations
as
from 20,000
mg/L
local
reflecting
in the Murray Basin to 50,000
mg/L
recharge/discharge
conditions (Macumber, 1984). Concentrations increase due to evaporation at three major discharge
points ( Fig. 16a ). Under these lake basins, ground recharge from the lakes. The similarity to
sea
water
water is
salinity also increases
preserved
as
the heavy brines
in these waters with little
changes
in
concentration ratios. Brine under these lakes will continue to accumulate and spread beneath the less saline water in these basins until a massive inflow of fresh water lakes
(Macumber, 1984). Similarly,
Southern
High
rather than
changes
dissolved solids concentrations in saline
Plains of Texas and New Mexico are the result of
discharge
the concentrations of the brine
of saline water from
deep brine aquifers,
springs
evaporation
as indicated
and lakes on the
of shallow
by constituent
ground
water
ratios of Cl/Br,
Na/K, and CI/SO4 being consistently smaller in evaporated waters than in deep-basin brines (Wood and Jones, 1990). Salinities increase in lakes and springs
recycled Southern
from the lakes to the
High
springs ( Fig.
Plains is affected
Locally, ground
by these evaporated
these two sources can be differentiated waters are characterized
16b ).
as surface water
through
by Na-SO4 waters
evaporates, and percolation
water in the
waters, but also
by oil-field
high-TDS,
Na-CI facies
Formation of the
brines. Salinization
salinity diagrams (Fig.
the use of
in contrast to
Ogallala
water is
17 ), as
by
evaporative
typical for oil-field-brine
affected water ( Nativ, 1988 ). The distribution of natural
salinity in
shallow
ground water reflects the geomorphology and hydrology
of the system, such as in alluvial fans in the western San
Gallanthine, 1989 ). Lowest salinities
(greater 5,000 mg/L TDS) than
larger
of California ( Deverel and
were found in the upper and middle fan areas and
in the lower fan areas and at the
poorly drained. Historically,
Joaquin Valley
soils associated with
intermittent streams and, therefore,
highest
salinities
margins of the fans where fine-grained
ephemeral were more
streams received less water and less saline.
Leaching
soils
are
flushing
of soil salinity by irrigation
Figure 14. Use of bromide, iodide, boron, and chloride concentrations in bivariate plots for identification of salt-water sources. Mixing between fresh water and salt water is suggested by linear trends between potential endmembers of mixing (from Morris and Bush, 1986).
Figure 15. Separation of different ground-water origins using the strontium-iodide relationship in ground water. Data shown are from the Lima Basin alluvial aquifer, Peru: Group I water is associated with alluvium; Group II water enters the alluvium from Jurassic sediments; Group III water enters the alluvium from granodiorites; Group IV water results from sea-water intrusion (from Lloyd and Heathcote, 1985 ).
Figure 16. Ground-water flow directions (arrows) and salinities (in percent) in parts of (a) the Murray Basin, southwest Australia, (from Macumber, 1984) and (b) at saline lakes, Southern High Plains of Texas (from Wood and Jones, 1990). Evaporation at major discharge sites and mixing causes TDS increases along the flow path.
Figure 17. Salinity diagrams of brines (from Nativ, 1988 ).
Ogallala
water contaminated
by (a)
saline lake water and (b) by oil-field
water
the
was
process that
primary
initially
formed shallow, saline
ground
water.
Subsequently,
evaporative concentration caused further increases in salt content. This evaporative trend is illustrated in plot of δ18O
and δD, which shows that samples collected at the lower fan
( Fig. 18a ). Waters with the highest salinities in the
ones
concentrations controlled Geothermal
by gypsum precipitation,
spring water in
Churchill
area are
of the
suggested by
as
County, Nevada, is
a
the most enriched
areas are
Na-SO4 type ( Fig.
18c ), with sulfate
saturation indices ( Fig. 18b ).
of local, meteoric origin
as
indicated by δ 18O
and δD values ( Fig. 19 ) (Welch and Preissler, 1986). Salinization caused by evaporation is suggested by
a
shift toward oxygen and
a
hydrogen isotope
enrichment. This evaporation trend
also indicated by
was
uniform Br/CI ratio. Of the minor constituents Ba, B, Br, F, Pb, Li, Mn, and Sr tested, bromide is largely controlled mineral
by evaporative concentration, such
phases
as
whereas barium, fluoride, lead, and manganese
ground water trapped
waters, as concentrations
in
of aquifers since
portions
deposition
does not contain any tritium because of the tritium
generally
12.4 years.
Anthropogenic
amounts of
tritium,
relationship
hydrothermal
sources
of salt, such
Snow and others
by
higher
in the
(1990)
since subsequent salt-water
or
isotope’s
short half-life of only
road salt, in contrast, may contain measurable
as
as these salts are dissolved and flushed into
was used
are
and Preissler, 1986).
higher temperature samples (Welch intrusion
controlled by
barite, fluorite, cerussite, and rhodochrosite, respectively. Boron, lithium, and
strontium may be indicators of the presence of
Saline
are
to
aquifers by modern precipitation. This sea water from road-salt
distinguish trapped
contamination in the coastal wells of Maine.
3.1.4.
Significant
Most of the
they or
Parameters
salinity
mix with fresh
facilitated
sources described in this
ground water.
by anthropogenic activities,
water and salt-water
bearing
characteristics will not differ of the
same
salinization
In other cases,
significantly
heavy
disposal
the same
Salinization is
indicated
suddenly
if the
naturally
at some
change
by
an
place
pumpage of fresh water,
produced
or
another, where initiated
drilling through
fresh-
water. In most instances, chemical
mixing of fresh
and salt water and artificial mixing
significant parameters
those for any individual source discussed in the
generally
substantial and occurs
suspected. However,
as
of
between natural
salt water with fresh water. Therefore,
are
occur
mixing of naturally saline water with fresh water is
such as
zones, or
report
for identification of natural
following
sections.
increase in chloride concentration. If this increase is
and is localized, a nonnatural mechanism and source should be is subtle and of
regional scale,
a natural mechanism or source may be
responsible. The stable
precipitation
isotopes Oxygen-18
and deuterium are
generally
useful to
water and water that is derived from a nonlocal source and
recharge water.
Molar ratios of
major chemical constituents,
distinguish
between local
identify evaporation
such as Na/CI, Ca/CI, and
Mg/CI,
of local
can be used
Figure 18. Natural salinization of ground water in parts of the San Joaquin Valley of California, controlled by (a) evaporation and (b) gypsum saturation, resulting in (c) a shift from low-TDS mixed-cation mixed-aniontype water to high-TDS, Na-SO4 water (from Deverel and Gallanthine, 1989 ).
Figure 19. Stable-isotope composition of ground water affected by evaporation, causing enrichment in oxygen-18 and deuterium as salinity increases. Chloride ranges: A 1,000 ppm)
1957).
has been
and
Segall, 1973).
reported along
the western
border, from the northeastern part (along the shore of Lake Superior), and the southwestern and southeastern parts of the state
(Feth
and others, 1965; Albin and Breummer,
1988).
In northwestern
Minnesota, mineralized ground water discharges from Ordovician and Cretaceous bedrock. Pumping from
area has caused
glacial aquifers in this
(Newport, 1977 ). Natural discharge in
overlying
alluvial
upward
intrusion of saline water from these
occurs from the Red
deep
bedrock aquifers
River-Winnipeg aquifer, degrading water quality
and in the Red River of the North. Chloride concentrations of up to
deposits
46,000 mg/L have been reported from wells along the shore of Lake Superior (Albin and Breummer, 1988).
Mississippi: below land surface of the state
Saline ground-water
(Feth
generally
and others, 1965).
underlies the state at depths of
Geohydrologic data indicate that
more
than 1,000 ft
most of the principal aquifers
previously contained salt water. This salt water was later partially replaced by fresh water but still
occupies downdip portions Missouri: Saline third of the state at
of these
ground
depths
aquifers (Bednar, 1988).
water
containing
more than
1,000 ppm TDS underlies the northern
less than 500 ft below land surface. This includes an area of very saline water
(TDS from 10,000 to 35,000 ppm)
that stretches from
Clay County in
the west to Marion
County in
the east
(Feth and others, 1965). The intrusion of natural salt-water from saline formations into shallow fresh is
spreading
Vernon Counties
(1)
history
meteoric
( Carpenter and Darr, and flow
recharge
path
migration
to shallow
ground-water withdrawal
has occurred in Bates, Barton, and
1978 ).
of saline
in the Front
of Kansas, (3) interaction with and
water
from the northwestern part of the state toward the south (Atkinson and others, 1986).
Intrusion of brackish water in response to
The
one-
Range
ground
water in central Missouri has been
suggested
to be
of Colorado, (2) dissolution of Permian halite in the subsurface
predominantly
silicate mineral
assemblages in
Paleozoic strata, (4) dilution
aquifer levels in central Missouri, and (5) mixing with local meteoric recharge
through Mississippian carbonates (Banner and others, 1989). Montana: Most of the eastern half of the state is underlain
depths
less than 500 ft below land surface.
Locally, TDS
by saline
water
(TDS> 1,000 ppm)
concentrations exceed 10,000 ppm
others, 1965). Maximum TDS concentrations in the glacial-deposits aquifer
are
(Feth
at
and
30,000 mg/L and in the
Virgelle aquifer 5,100 mg/L (Taylor, 1983). Nebraska: Saline
ground water (TDS>1,000 ppm)
underlies the state at 500 to 1,000 ft below land
surface in the southeast and at greater than 1,000 ft below land surface in the remainder of the state. TDS increase to values greater than 3,000 ppm in the southwest Salt water appears to be no serious threat to
ground
(Feth
and others,
1965).
water in the state except for the easternmost
part where TDS up to 3,500 mg/L are reported from the Dakota Aquifer and Paleozoic rocks (Engberg and Druliner, 1988). Taylor (1983) reported maximum TDS concentrations in the Dakota aquifer of 30,000 mg/L. According reported
to Atkinson and others
(1986), local
occurrences of salt-water intrusion have been
in Saunders, Lancaster, and Saline Counties. Saline surface water occurs in some of the
sandhills lakes in western Nebraska and in
some
localities in eastern Nebraska
(Krieger and others, 1957).
Approximately
24 percent (290,000 acres) of Nebraska’s total irrigable acreage
considered saline
were
and alkaline in 1960 ( Fuhriman and Barton, 1971 ). Nevada: Saline surface water and shallow saline
throughout
water has been
reported locally
central and western Nevada. TDS concentrations vary between 1,000 ppm and 35,000 ppm
(Feth and others, 1965). As much alkaline
ground
as
42 percent (475,000 acres) of the state’s
irrigable
acreage is saline
or
(in 1960).
Evaporation
of ground water in the many closed basins is the principal salinization mechanism in
Nevada. There
are
in the
Basin in Soda
Tonopah
Seepage
two places where TDS in ground water exceeds 10,000 mg/L; these
flows from two
Spring Valley and Clayton Valley a few miles south
springs
contain TDS of 15,000 and 30,000
mg/L.
are
point
sources
and east of Walker Lake.
Water from most aquifers is
saline in the Smoke Creek Basin, the Desert Creek Basin, and the Black Rock Deserts in the lower Quinn River Basin, as well
ground water in
as
in the Lovelock area in the lower Humboldt River basin.
sediments
containing large
amounts of salts is the
greater than 1,000 mg/L, and whereby mineral
mineralized
underlain by saline water most
likely
source of the
ranging
high
Closed-basin lakes of
in TDS from 1,000 to 3,000
which
some
of
a
few thousand acres that is
soluble salts in the aquifers
mg/L;
high salinity include Big Soda Lake, Pyramid Lake, a closed-basin sump northeast of
Ground water in
geothermal
areas
1988). Evaporative concentration of composition
area of Churchill
County.
are
the
Walker Lake, Winnemucca
Fermly.
The
of these lakes probably are unconsolidated sediments in the Lahontan
highly concentrated ground water discharges into
the chemical
an area
salt content (Fuhriman and Barton, 1971 ).
Lake, Carson Sink, Rhodes marsh, and salt in
for TDS concentrations
Lake contain about 50 to 60 percent of all the
Pyramid
water in the state. North of Lake Mead is
ground
reason
residence time of
content increases toward the center of the basins. The
of Carson Sink, Walker Lake, and east of
areas
primary
Long
frequently
The hottest water
exceeds 1,000
concentrations of greater than 6,000
mg/L
springs
sampled
sources of
from
Valley Group,
rivers and lakes (Whitehead and Feth, 1961 ).
meteoric water before
of thermal waters from
primary
at
recharge
mg/L
(Thomas
and Hoffman,
and mineral-rock interactions govern
and wells in the
Bradys
TDS
Hot
Bradys
Springs
Hot
Springs geothermal
contained 2,600
have been reported from the Desert Peak
area
mg/L
but
(Welch and
Preissler, 1986). New New
Hampshire: Jersey:
southeastern
parts
Tidal waters have intruded
Saline
ground
of the state at
water
depths
aquifers
(TDS>1,000 ppm)
Jersey coastline (Feth
and others,
present along the New Jersey Atlantic Coast:
generally
below the 800-ft sand. The
bodies depends
on
underlies most of the southern and
at or greater than 1,000 ft below land surface.
water decreases toward the coast in the south and is the entire New
in the Portsmouth area (Newport, 1977 ).
position
a
generally
Depth
to saline
less than 500 ft below land surface
along
1965). Two major water bodies of salty ground water are shallow one in Pleistocene
deposits
and
a
deep
one,
of the salt-water/fresh-water boundaries in those water
the head distribution of fresh water in the respective units (Upson, 1966). Salt water
from tidal estuaries and in the areas of
dredging Rahway,
Camden
has intruded into water table and artesian
bays
aquifers
Sayreville (Raritan River), Gibbstown-Paulsborough,
due to
Newark
and
pumping
(Passaic River),
and Salem.
(Delaware River),
New Mexico: With the exception of isolated areas in the north-central and southwestern parts of the state, saline
ground
water
(TDS>1,000 ppm) underlies New Mexico
at shallow
depth (1,000 ppm)
reaching from the coast approximately
underlies the eastern part of the state
100 miles inland in the south and 30 miles inland in the
north. Depths to saline water generally exceeds 500 ft with the exception of coastal and the northeast, where
salt water, which extends associated with salt
saline water
depths to
has caused
less than 500 ft (Feth and others, 1965). The
upward
lowered water levels in the Black Creek
Survey,
sources
of
and downward intrusion from
layered
aquifer to
(Miller
more than 100 ft below land
saline
aquifers
and others,
and lateral
1977).
It has
surface, threatening fresh
with the potential of lateral and upward intrusion of saline water (U.S. Geological
1984). concentrations of sodium and chloride in the Black Creek
Background Georgetown greater than
Counties are less than 280 those may indicate
intrusion caused
mixing
mg/L
and less than 40
aquifer
mg/L, respectively.
of
Horry
and
Concentrations
of sea water and fresh water. There is no indication of sea-water
by pumping, suggesting
migration of salt water. Residual in a
zone
and others, 1988).
intrusion from the Atlantic Ocean in the Beauford and Charleston areas
ground-water
in the southeast
the center of the state from the southwest to the northeast, is
through
deposits (Speiran
Heavy pumpage
are
areas
that deterioration of water
sea water may not be flushed from
quality
is associated with vertical
downdip portions of aquifers, resulting
fairly wide zone of dispersion and diffusion (Zack and Roberts, 1988 ). South Dakota: Ground water of
TDS underlies the state at
(Feth
and others,
Upconing
which exist
variable quality
containing
between 1,000 and 10,000 ppm
between less than 500 ft and greater than 1,000 ft below land surface
1965). reported
at various
in the Black Hills area of southwestern South Dakota
(Newport,
of saline water due to pumpage of fresh water
places throughout 1977 ). But the
depths
highly
the state,
major
including
salt-water
throughout
problem
aquifers
has been
in the state is associated with the occurrence of saline seeps,
most of the northern, central, and northeastern parts of the state (Atkinson and
others, 1986). In 1950 it was estimated that water into
aquifers
above them.
permit upward migration
approximately 12,000
Inadequately plugged
to 15,000 artesian wells within the state leak
test holes drilled for oil, gas, and uranium may
of saline water even in areas where no
concentrations in the state’s
aquifers
are:
production
is
occurring.
Maximum TDS
glacial deposits, 10,000 mg/L; Dakota, 8,000 mg/L; Inyan Kara,
10,000
mg/L; Sundance, 7,600 mg/L; Minnelusa, 4,300 mg/L; Madison, 120,000 mg/L;
130,000
mg/L;
and Deadwood, 40,000 mg/L
More than 70 percent
Red River,
(Taylor, 1983). of the state’s
(1,196,000 acres)
land surface was considered saline
irrigable
or
alkaline in 1960 ( Fuhriman and Barton, 1971 ). Tennessee: The western two-thirds of the state are underlain than 1,000 ppm TDS. The
depths
by ground
water
containing
to the interface between saline and fresh water is 1,000 ppm)
water
in the southern
along
part
at
depths
1 found in most fresh waters and
compared
brines. Ion
possible
as
aquifer matrix
results in an increase in
ratio of sea water. This increase may be more
pronounced
in older
waters than in modern waters, which led Sidenvall (1981) to propose that saline water in the Uppsala,
Sweden,
area
is fossil ground water representing the last
by Snow and others (1990) on
to
distinguish
sea
transgression.The ratio of CI/SO4 was used
sea-water intrusion from road-salt contamination in Maine, based
the fact that sulfate concentrations and
CI/SO4
ratios
are
substantially
lower in road-salt affected well
waters than in sea-water affected well waters. This ratio can also be used to intrusion from
previous
by Pomper (1981) characterized
intrusion in waters
by CI/SO4
undergone
Ba/CI
ratios that
Floridan of
use
SO4/CI
aquifer of
SO4/CI
anhydrite the
source
exchange
are
of saline water in the Santa Barbara, California
and sulfate reduction. In addition to the the source of the
ratio also seems to indicate
southwest Florida, as shown
ratios versus
SO4
mixing
mg/L,
as done
SO4/CI
ratio
as a
tracer of
sea
water and
( Fig.
mixing.
41 )
downgradient in
Because of the
that
ratios of B/CI and
recharge
the theoretical
( Steinkampf,
are
similar fashion,
area as ocean water
CI/SO4 ratio, the
by samples that plot close to
concentrations
a
deep saline ground-water in that
between
solution causes sulfate concentration to increase
of the
500
higher than those found in modernseawater. In
appeared to indicate that sea water is
1982 ). The
plot
ion
having chloride concentrations greater than
in the Netherlands. As a result of sulfate reduction, older saline waters
Martin (1982) explained the had
modern sea-water
distinguish
area
(Martin,
water in the
mixing
line in
a
1982 ). However, gypsum-
some
of the samples, limiting
generally high degree
of water-rock
interaction in this carbonate-dominated aquifer which governs concentrations of calcium, magnesium, and bicarbonate and masks the source of was used
by Steinkampf (1982)
salinity,
the conservative nature of the chloride and bromide ions
to demonstrate that dilution of marine-like
mechanism in the evolution of saline
ground
water in this
aquifer.
interstitial waters had been flushed from the sediments, are the
ground
water is a
significant
Past marine inundations, after saline
probable
source of
salinity (Steinkampf,
1982 ).
The Br/CI weight ratio in waters.
Therefore, mixing of
sea water
sea
is approximately 3.3 ×
10-3,
water and fresh water may cause
which is comparable to most fresh
only a slight change
in Br/CI ratio in the
Figure 41. Bivariate plot of SO4/CI ratios and SO4 concentrations for coastal saline ground water of southwest Florida. Sea-water intrusion is indicated in those samples that plot close to the theoretical mixing line between sea water and fresh water (modified from Steinkampf, 1982 ).
mixing
water when
compared to
of 3.4 ×
10-3
samples
in the Manhattan Beach area, California.
Cl, this ratio
for Pacific Ocean water and
can
example, Brennan (1956) reported Br/CI ratios 3.2 × 10-3 to 3.7 × 10-3 for sea-water intrusion
the fresh-water value. For a
range of
However, because of the conservative
often be used to differentiate between salt-water
brine is typically characterized by Br/CI ratios smaller than 5 × smaller than the value in
significantly higher
sea
sources.
10-4,
nature of Br and
For example, halite-dissolution
which is
one
order of
magnitude
water. On the other hand, oil-field brines often have ratios of Br/CI that
are
than sea-water and halite-dissolution brine values ( Whittemore and Pollock, 1979 ;
Richter and Kreitler, 1986a ,b; Whittemore, 1988 ). Therefore, the Br/CI ratio may be useful to differentiate between sea-water intrusion and oil-field contamination in coastal settings that include oil fields. In settings that include storage and application of salt for road deicing, such
part of the United States, the Br/CI ratio contamination. Saline
ground
water
can
also be used to
as
along the
distinguish
typically contains Ion
intruding
exchange
little bromide with Br/CI
carbonates,
as
weight
and carbonate dissolution are
sea water.
This is the
shown in
a
case even
sea-water intrusion from road-salt
from past or current intrusion of
originating
detectable bromide with Br/CI ratios similar to sea water, whereas saline salt
coast in the northeastern
ratios less than 1 ×
major chemical
contains
sea water
ground water originating from
10-3 (Snow and others, 1990).
reactions that alter the
composition
study of rock-water interactions and seawater-freshwater mixing in coastal dune
to act
conservatively although
of silt,
clay,
K-feldspar,
organic
and Ca-Na base
considerably from the
the
aquifer consisted of
matter. Sulfate reduction, oxidation of
exchange on clay
theoretical
composition
sea
was
water,
(b) Ca-Mg exchange, (c)
minerals cause the
Oahu, Hawaii. Even at
deposits
on
a very small
in the intruded water as
compared
zone
Na-Ca or Na-Mg base
shown by Mink (1960) who studied concentration
calcareous and alluvial
decreasing by
the coastal zone of
the ocean bottom before
degree of dilution,
in
indicated
(3)
by a
more
solution-precipitation
lower Na, K, and
water
entering
as
of
authigenic
saline water to differ
zone. Nadler and others as
being (a) dilution
reduction. The
the water
the basaltic
moves
aquifer
changes
Similarly,
in
major cations
sea-water intrusion
mixing composition
reactions cause (1)
are very
potassium samples
in
of sea water and
higher
Ca content,
HCO3 content than expected from simple mixing
assumption that old water had
to occur and, therefore, would be characterized
through
chloride concentration of 17,600 ppm
(Ikeda, 1967 ). The increase in Ca content with time was used by Jacks (1973) to distinguish old from young sea water, based on the
same
of southern
than 100 percent and the
do not reflect the theoretical
fresh water. Instead, ion exchange and and
sea
to 19,000 ppm in open sea water,
Fuji City, Japan,
mixing
exchange, and (d) sulfate
more than 50 percent (Mink, 1960 ).
(2) slightly higher SO4 content,
composition of the
within sandy sediments
changes
noticeable, with the calcium concentration increasing by concentration
plant material, formation
of diluted sea water in the
,
one
rather uniform quartz sand with only minor amounts
(1981) summarized processes occurring in the transition of
of
in aquifers that contain only small amounts of clay and
aquifers of Oregon. Magaritz and Luzier (1985) found that of all the major ions, chloride was the only
and some
road
by higher Ca
more time for ion
exchange
sea
water
reactions
contents than younger sea water. Under
certain
circumstances,
sea-water intrusion water
are
manganese concentrations may be indicative of ion
samples
This is the case in
from Manhattan Beach, California, in which sodium ions of the
intruding
sea
exchanged for manganese in the sand and gravel aquifer. Largest manganese concentrations
appear to be associated with Mg/Ca ratios close to Dilution diagrams
were
theoretical
mixing
away from and
exchange,
or
slightly greater than
one
( Brennan, 1956 ).
used by Howard and Lloyd (1983) who investigated the relationship of three ,
groups of saline ground water in east-central
points
exchange.
line between
sea
42 ). On these plots, data points close to the
England ( Fig.
water and local
water indicate
ground
simple mixing, whereas data
lines indicate chemical reactions, such as mineral dissolution and
mixing
reduction. It is
sulphate
attempt differentiating saline waters by the
use of
and the l/CI ratio to distinguish three groups.
explanation
of the
resulted in a
big cluster of
hydrochemical data
to note that Howard and
interesting
ion
precipitation,
Lloyd (1983)
did not at first
major chemical constituents but instead used isotopes
Only because of this grouping did dilution diagrams
allow
an
evolution of the individual groups that otherwise would have only
points.
3.3.4. Reaction Characteristics of Sea-Water Intrusion The chemical in response to
changes
composition
of sea water
changes
mixing and chemical reactions
are most
intrusion deviates little from sea-water
just
water
can
data points. On bivariate
above
background
concentration values to
theoretical Ion
mixing line between
of
major cations
on trilinear
cations in direct
and anions versus chloride, data
as discussed below.
points plot
close to the
local fresh water and sea wetter.
proportion
calcium ions, whereas in a
have free
negative
surface
charges that
to the abundance of cations in the water and to the
characteristics of the cations and the minerals. In a
mainly with
by ion exchange
less than sea-water
plots in the straight-line relationship between
Exchange: Clay minerals, especially montmorillonite,
occupied by
just
typical
typical
salt-water
fresh-water
aquifer,
aquifer,
water intrusion into a fresh-water
aquifer, ion exchange will
these sites are saturated
the sites are occupied
solution and calcium will be released from mineral for calcium but the Na-Ca
Lloyd (1983) attributed
more
exchange
exchange
occur
sites.
is the most
whereby
are
sorption
mainly by sodium
ions. Whenever the relation of calcium to sodium in the water changes, for example in response to
exchanged
by
dilution characterizes deviation of the brackish water from sea-
easily be identified
plots
Subsequent
sea water occurs within a transition zone, which is characterized
ion-exchange front, simple
composition. This
occur
43 and 44 and below. These
sea-water front that mixes with fresh water.
concentration. The front of this transition zone is characterized Behind the
Figures
aquifer. Changes
composition.
Mixing: Mixing of fresh water and chloride concentrations from
summarized in
as
pronounced within the initial
as it intrudes a fresh-water
sea-
sodium will be taken out of
Magnesium and potassium may also be
significant
one. For
example,
Howard and
than 96 percent of the base exchange in the Chalk aquifer of east-central
Figure 42. Dilution diagrams of major ions with theoretical mixing lines between sea water and local fresh water. Simple mixing is indicated for samples plotting close to theoretical mixing lines. Deviations from these lines suggest additional chemical reactions (from Howard and Lloyd, 1983 ).
Figure 43. Relationship between flow regimes plain (from Back, 1966 and Custodio, 1987). ,
and
hydrochemical facies
in
ground
water in a big coastal
Figure 44. Geochemical processes and changes aquifer (from Custodio, 1987).
in ionic
composition along the flow path
in a coastal
England
to Na-Ca
Intrusion of fresh water into
major changes not affected
intrudes
a
on
This
exchange.
salt-water
a
ionic ratios
as a
aquifer will cause the opposite ion exchange.
result of these
potential
a
water. In contrast, if fresh water replaces marine water
sea
in the
early part
of the
can
result
intruding
(Custodio, 1987). Figure
sea-water front as
plotted
the lowest chloride
representing
values),
as chloride content increases. The
the matching decrease in Na+K, and the
changes
because all the of sea water
ratio)
whereas
diamond-shaped
high
increase in
ratios often
washes out marine
Piper diagram.
triangle (samples
characterizes the
mixing
or
one to
39 illustrates this process of ion
on a
between calcium and sodium characterizes the cluster in the cation
No
tracer of intrusion. If sea water
fresh-water aquifer, Na/CI ratios will decrease from ratios often greater than
sediments, very high Na/CI ratios
triangle
Table 7 summarizes
in water facies. The chloride concentration is
changes
by ion exchange, which makes the Na/CI ratio
less than the value in
exchange
is assumed to be instantaneous ( Kafri and Arad, 1979 ).
exchange
field reflects the
CI+SO4 percentages ( Fig.
1
exchange
through 12,
line in the anion
straight slight
Ion
increase in
Ca+Mg,
39 ).
in the Na/CI ratio will occur in water that intrudes behind the front of ion exchange sites are
exchange
(0.85
molar
ratio),
already occupied. Therefore,
which differs from the
and from the small ratio characteristic for many
typical
the Na/CI ratio should
ratio of halite-dissolution brines
oil-field/deep-basin
degree of change that occurred because of ion exchange may
not
brines
the ratio
approach
(
decrease in sulfate concentration relative to the
composition.
Bromide: Sea-water intrusion may lead to bromide concentrations greater than liter in coastal
aquifers.
This has a
big potential impact
on future
drinking-water
a
few
milligrams
per
resources because
elevated bromide concentrations make water treatment more difficult. Traditional chloride treatment
or
Table 7.
Changes in
ionic ratios due to ion exchange relative to the of the intruding water.
position
Fresh-water Recent
Salt-water
Intrusion
(a)
Intrusion
(b) Behind
Advancing
advancing
front Ca/Na
A|Ca+Mg|/A|Na| Na/CI
increase constant decrease
front no
change change
no
change
no
decrease constant increase
ozonation of
high-bromine
water causes the formation of bromoform and other brominated
trihalomethanes, which may, at bromide concentrations greater than 2 mg/L in the water, exceed allowable concentration in future (1992) standards (McGuire and others, 1989, U.S. Water News, 1990a ).
through muds
Minor Constituents: As sea water passes
enriched in those minor constituents that
are
on
estuary
or ocean
bottoms, it may become
typically concentrated in those muds, such
as
iodide,
strontium, and fluoride (Lloyd and Heathcote, 1985 ). 3.3.5
State-by-State Summary of Sea-Water Intrusion Sea-water intrusion is not
phenomenon and
a new
of the United States. For example, the
early
as
city of Galveston
has been
reported to occur in
had to abandon
one
every coastal state
of their water-supply wells
as
in 1896 (Turner and Foster, 1934 ) and in Florida, intrusion has been experienced along most of
the Gulf and Atlantic Coast (Atkinson and others, 1986). The following section lists the published occurrences
for sea-water intrusion for all the states with marine shorelines. This discussion includes
water intrusion due to coastal times of
aquifers
anthropogenic
activities but also mentions the occurrence of saline
related to natural processes, such as inclusion since
higher sea-water levels.
deposition
or
sea-
ground water in
past intrusions during
This compilation is a result of Iterature review.
Alabama: Sea-water intruded fresh-water aquifers from Fort Morgan to Gulf Shores (Atkinson and
others, 1986), and overdevelopment of
a
well field in the Mobile-Gulf Coast
of saline water from the Mobile River into Pleistocene water contamination of wells in Baldwin
County has
sea-water flooding and natural sea spray, and California: In southern California, the level at the turn of the century but
sand-gravel aquifers (Miller
been caused
(Poland
and others,
1959).
potentiometric
(A) Mission, County,
San Luis
Rey,
Santa
(B),
a fresh-water zone,
surfaces of coastal
decreased in the
following
aquifers
were above sea
decades. Because of
heavy
water levels have declined in some areas to as much as 70 ft
salinity
Banks and Richter
threatened sea-water intrusion areas
and others, 1977). Sea-
by overproduction of
below sea level (Brennan, 1956). In the Manhattan Beach area of Los wells were abandoned after 1940 when
lateral intrusion
leakage from salt-water ponds (Chandler and others, 1985).
gradually
developments in the 1920’s and 1940’s
region caused
and
Margarita,
Malibu Creek, Trancas Creek, Morre
of
ground
(1953)
potential
Angeles,
most of the
original water
water increased due to sea-water intrusion
summarized: known sea-water intrusion areas sea-water intrusion areas
Coastal Plain
Bay, Salinas,
Orange County,
Coastal
(C)
in California as
Coastal Plain Los
(A),
being:
Angeles
strip Salinas Valley and Pajaro Valley,
Pajaro, Santa Clara, and Sacramento-San Joaquin Valley between Pittsburgh, and Antioch; (B) Tia Juana,
Otay,
Santa Clara River,
Carpenteria, Goleta, Arroyo Grande;
and
(C) Sweetwater,
San
Dieguito,
San
Onotre, San Mateo, San Juan, Ventura River, Santa Ynez River, Santa Maria River, Carmel, Ygnacio
Clayton, Napa-Sonoma, Petaluma,
Eel River, Mad River, and Smith River. Of those, the most serious sea-
water intrusions have occurred in the West Coast Basin of Los
Angeles County,
East Coastal Plain
Pressure Area of
Orange County,
Valley in the San Francisco Bay
Petaluma
Valley in
Sonoma
County, Napa-Sonoma Valley,
Pajaro Valley in Monterey and
area,
Santa Clara
Santa Cruz Counties, Salinas Valley in
Monterey County, Oxnard Plain Basin in Ventura County, and Mission Basin in San Diego County ( Fuhriman and Barton, 1971 ). intrusion were
Valley,
Elkhorn
(A)
Eel River
slough
In
1975, the
Valley,
Petaluma
area, Salinas
Valley
Oxnard Plain Basin, West Coast Basin
(B)
14 known
(A) and
14
suspected (B)
Valley, Napa-Sonoma Valley,
areas
Santa Clara
of sea-water
Valley, Pajaro
pressure area, Monro Basin, Chorro Basin, Los Osos Basin,
(Los Angeles County),
Russian River Basin, Drakes Estero Basin, Bolinas
San Luis
Lagoon Basin,
Rey Valley,
and Mission Basin, and
San Rafael Basin, Suisum-Fairfield
Valley, Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, Tonitas Creek Basin, and San Diego River-Mission Valley Basin (Smith, 1989 ). Farrar and Bertoldi (1988) identified and the delta area, around
Valleys,
Monterey Bay,
Morro
areas of salt-water intrusion around San Francisco
Bay
Bay
and at the mouths of Petaluma, Sonoma, and Napa
where the salt water infiltrated from tidal channels. Diversion of stream flow from the Sacramento
and San
Joaquin
whereas fresh-water
Pittsburgh, Alameda
Rivers has caused inland
County. Pumping
of salt water in the areas around Fairfield and
has caused sea-water intrusion and land subsidence in
pumping
of water for
migration
irrigation purposes
has led to sea-water intrusion
near
the mouths
of the Pajaro and Salinas Rivers (Farrar and Bertoldi, 1988). Connecticut: Lateral sea-water intrusion from harbors and tidal river estuaries due to heavy pumpage has contaminated many industrial and
including the cities of
New Haven and
municipal
for the abandonment of one to two
(Atkinson and others, 1986). During dry periods, far
as
Philadelphia (U.S. heavy
1974). High
pumpage from shallow
1953)
aquifers, specific
a
all
problem
the Delaware coastline and is
has migrated up the Delaware River nearly
dredging mg/L
impermeable
and 17,000
as
mg/L
soils
many well fields
(Miller
and others,
were measured in core
depths of wells from
to 60 ft below land surface (Woodruff, 1969 ). a
combination of permeable
and heavy pumpage in coastal areas. Intrusion was
municipal water supplies
1924. Interior drainage canals which lowered the water table and tidal action contributes to the
of
of sea-water intrusion stems from
locations and some 18
a
along
Atlantic Coast of southeastern Delaware. The
lengthy coastline,
Sea-water intrusion is
area
wells and 20 to 30 domestic wells each year
sea water
and the
samples were obtained ranged from 5
at 28
public
chloride concentrations between 6,000
Florida: The Florida limestone
reported
Bay and from the Atlantic has contaminated
aquifers
samples obtained from wells along the which core
Island Sound coastal
Environmental Protection Agency, 1973 ). Lateral and vertical intrusion of salt
water from the Delaware River and Delaware
due to
Long
Bridgeport (Miller and others, 1974).
Delaware: Salt-water intrusion has been
responsible
wells in the
problem ( Bruington,
reported (in
have been adversely affected since
permitted sea water to advance
1972 ; U.S. Environmental Protection
inland by
Agency,
1973 ).
permanent threat to the Biscayne Aquifer because the aquifer is unconfined, is
hydraulically connected to the sea,
is
heavily pumped,
and is
pumpage has resulted in water levels below sea level
extensively cut by a
near some
network of canals.
Heavy
well fields (Johnston and Miller, 1988).
Large
cones of
depression
and sea-water intrusion due to
areas, such as Jacksonville,
Tampa,
including
pumpage have been reported in many
and Miami. Intrusion on a smaller scale has been experienced
most of the Atlantic and Gulf Coasts the affected counties,
heavy
(Atkinson
Escambia
and others,
1986).
Miller and others
County (heavy pumping
near
Bayou
(1977)
along
listed some of
Chico caused intrusion
into sand and gravel aquifer and reversed flow gradient and induced salt-water migration from the Escambia River), Bay County (saline surface water leaked downward from bays contaminating two wells), Martin
County (encroachment
city wells),
Pasco
of water into shallow
County (sea-water
aquifer
from St. Lucie River due to overpumpage of
intrusion due to overpumpage of coastal
wells),
Charlotte
County
(sea-water intrusion from Gulf and estuaries and intrusion due to poor well construction and improper Palm Beach
abandonment),
during dry period
County (inland flow of
caused contamination of
Biscayne aquifer in coastal
areas due to
saline water through canals and intracoastal
Biscayne aquifer),
waterways
County (salt-water migration
Broward
into
heavy pumpage and construction of canals), Dade County (dry
period caused inland flow of salt water up the Miami canal and contaminated four water wells), and Miami
(contamination of due to
wells due to inland flow of salt water during
dry periods
and inflow of saline
ground water
heavy pumpage).
In 1943 in the Miami area, sea-water intrusion was restricted to wells within two miles of the coast
except
for some areas
1944 ). In Citrus
along
County
threefold, respectively,
tidal canals where intrusion was observed somewhat farther inland ( Love,
sodium and chloride concentrations exceed
as a
acceptable
levels twofold and
result of high pumpage of fresh water and seepage of salt water from the Gulf
(U.S. Water News, 1990b). In the Floridan aquifer of west-central Florida, the transition fresh water and saline water may be
as
zone
between
far as 50 miles inland from the coast. Future ground-water
withdrawal could lead to further landward movement of the salt-water front in that area at an average rate of 1982 ). In Pascola
approximately
0.35 ft per
ground water,
at 100 ft below sea level, is located
day (Wilson,
1972). Three encroachment mechanisms permeable limestone where the aquifer is in
are
heads caused
the interface between fresh and saline
approximately one to two
responsible
contact with sea
and canals in which sea-water intruded, and (3)
hydraulic
County,
upward
for that
miles inland
position:
(Reichenbaugh,
(1) lateral inflow
through
water offshore, (2) leakage from tidal streams
movement of salt water in response to lowered
by pumpage of fresh water (Reichenbaugh, 1972).
Sea-water intrusion into fresh-water reaches of the Caloosahatchee River occurs between La Belle and
Olga during
In 1968, the dam in the
low-flow
upstream
periods
as
repeated injections through
limits of water
deeper parts
containing
of the river and
less than 250
approximately five
the lock chamber at W. P. Franklin Dam.
mg/L of
chloride were 11.4 miles from the
miles from the dam at shallow
depth (Boggess,
1970 ).
Georgia:
Sea-water intrusion has been
County (Atkinson
and others, 1986).
reported
for Chatham
County (Savannah)
and
Glynn
Louisiana: Sea-water intrusion has occurred all along the coastal shores of Louisiana. In addition, the cities of Lake Charles and New Orleans have
high pumpage of ground
water
experienced
severe cases of salt-water intrusion due to
the Gulf of Mexico invades coastal streams and fresh-water aquifers, such River
area
Overpumping
in Kennebec and
salt-water intrusion, the
deep
well
as
the
one
in the Vermillion
( Newport, 1977).
Maine:
Augusta,
water from
(Atkinson and others, 1986). During periods of low flow, tidal
producing
has resulted in intrusion of tidal estuary waters into local aquifers south of Counties. Several domestic water wells have been affected
Sagadahoc
at times over the year
problem fluctuating
from the bedrock
aquifer
near
(Atkinson
and others,
the town of Bowdoinham,
1986).
by
A 300-ft-
Sagadahoc County,
was
contaminated by salt water from the tidal reach of the Kennebec River, resulting in abandonment of the well (Miller and others,
1974).
Maryland: Sea-water intrusion has been reported in St. Mary's, Anne Arundal, Harfork, Dorchester, and Somerset Counties activities appear to be
as
well
as on
responsible
for
Kent Island.
Overpumping, leaky
well
and dredging
casings,
ground-water contamination. Salty water from
the
Patapsco
River
estuary has intruded shallow fresh-water aquifers in the harbor district of Baltimore. Heavy pumpage and
leaky casings
also induced the inflow of salt water from
Chesapeake Bay into wells at Joppatowne,
County, and Westover, Somerset County. Lateral and vertical intrusion of salt
water from tidal river
estuaries, enhanced by casing leaks in abandoned wells, has been reported in the Dorchester
County.
Anne Arundal
The inland limit of saline
Cretaceous the
County, Annapolis, aquifer, along
Tertiary aquifer,
and
ground
County,
areas
of
Cambridge,
and the Solomons-Patuxent River, St.
water in coastal
plain aquifers
are
Harford
along
Mary’s
the coast for the
a line from Dorchester to the southwestern state-line comer with Delaware in
along
a line
half way between the shore and the
parallel
to the
Chesapeake
Maryland-Delaware
shoreline in the south and
state line in the north,
approximately
crossing the
state line just
north of 39 degrees latitude (Miller and others, 1974). Massachusetts: Sea-water intrusion has been
reported
in several areas in Massachusetts,
including Bristol, Plymouth, and Barnstable Counties (Atkinson and others, 1986)
as well as
Provincetown, Scituate, and Somerset Counties (Newport, 1977).
Mississippi: Heavy pumpage saline water from the Gulf and the Formations (Miller and others,
and the
resulting
Pascagoula
decline in water levels induced lateral intrusion of
River estuary at Moss Point into Miocene and the Citronelle
1977). Sea-water intrusion
has also been reported in Hancock and Jackson
Counties (Atkinson and others, 1986). New
Hampshire:
Tidal waters have intruded aquifers in the Portsmouth
pumpage has induced intrusion in Rockingham
County (Atkinson
area
(Newport, 1977) and
and others, 1986).
New Jersey: Intrusion of sea-water is a major problem that has been monitored since 1923 (Ayers and
Pustay, 1988).
1983 ).
In 1977, the salt-water
Overpumping, leaky casings,
and
monitoring
dredging
network included more than 400 wells ( Schaefer,
have led to intrusion in Salem, Gloucester,
Cape May,
Middlesex, Monmouth, Ocean, and Atlantic Counties (Miller and others, 1974; Newport, 1977 ; Schaefer, 1983 ). The most
significant
intrusions have occurred in the areas of
has been observed for more than 40 years, in the had to be abandoned in 1976, and in
inland, such
Keyport-Union
Sayreville,
where salt-water intrusion
Beach area, where the
Cape May City ( Schaefer,
original
1983 ). Even areas 20 miles or more
in Gloucester and Atlantic Counties, have experienced sea-water intrusion due to
as
pumping and corroded well casings. At Somers Point, Atlantic County,
a
wedge
of salt water has moved
3,000 ft inland into the Cohansey aquifer. At Artificial Island, Salem County, high pumpage
generating plant
well field
has induced salt water (Miller and others, 1974; Newport, 1977). Since the
well waters in the Old
Bridge
aquifer in the
have shown
high
background
levels of less than 5
chloride concentrations,
Walker, 1981 ). In the Sayreville
mg/L
Boroughs
indicating
to
greater
of
presented
early 1970’s,
and Union Beach, Monmouth
Keyport
than 600
mg/L
in some coastal wells ( Schaefer and
area, the transition zone between fresh water and salt water has
by Schaefer (1983)
County,
sea-water intrusion. Concentrations increased from
0.2 to 0.4 miles inland between 1977 and 1981 (Schaefer, 1983 ). A in New Jersey was
at a nuclear
listing
migrated
of previous salt-water studies
.
New York: Sea-water intrusion has been documented
Long
on
Island ( Lusczynski and
Swarzenski, 1966), in the Town of Southampton, the Eastport-Remsenburg-Spoenk-Westhampton and the North
Haven-Sag
Harbor area ( Anderson and Berkebile, 1976 ). Coastal
contaminated with salt water in the Port
Long-term
use
Washington
plain aquifers
area, where sea water was used in
area,
have been
settling ponds.
of the salt water in sand and gravel pits has raised chloride levels in nearby shallow and
deep wells from
a
normal level of less than 20 mg/L to greater than 1,000
mg/L in
an area
of
more
than two
square miles (Swarzenski, 1963 ; Miller and others, 1974).
Heavy pumping producing aquifers
on
southeastern Queens and two more
and reduced natural
Long
Island
have caused lateral intrusion of ocean water into
recharge
(Newport,
1977). Sea-water intrusion in southern Nassau and
Counties, Long Island, occurs as one wedge of salt water in
wedges in
the upper and lower portions of the
underlying
artesian
shallow
glacial deposits
aquifer (Miller and others,
1974). Salt-water intrusion may be occurring in two
Remsenburg-Spoenk-Westhampton
area
and the North
lense of fresh water in the area,
underlies
a
vertically.
The
depth
areas in
the Town of
Haven-Sag
possibly allowing
Southampton,
the Eastport-
Harbor area, Long Island. Salt water
salt-water intrusion both
laterally
and
to salt water in three testholes was found to be at 350, 620, and 1,060 ft below sea
level, respectively. Chloride concentrations in affected wells range from 200 to 13,890 mg/L (Anderson and Berkebile, 1976 ). North Carollna: Sea-water intrusion has been documented in Carteret, Pamlico, Beaufort, Hyde,
Dare, and Tyrell Counties (Atkinson and others, 1986). Tidal action resulted in intrusion of saline water into
ground-water sources through drainage canals on former marsh Carolina. This forced abandonment of large
areas of
cropland
land in the Coastal Plains of eastern North in parts of
Tyrell, Dare, Hyde, Beaufort,
Pamlico, and Carteret Counties ( U.S. Geological Survey, 1984 ). Heavy pumpage could also induce
recharge
of salt water from streams affected
sea water
by
resulting
from tidal action and/or decreased
fresh-water flow.
Oregon: Sea-water intrusion has been documented in Eugene (Lane County), North Bend (Coos County),
in the Willamette
Valley in the West Cascades, and in Clatsop and Tillamook Counties (Atkinson
and others, 1986). Sea-water overrides fresh-water storms
( Magaritz
aquifers in
the Horsfall Beach
area as a
result of winter
and Luzier, 1985 ).
Pennslyvania: Dredging of sea-water intrusion near
tidal rivers and
Philadelphia in
heavy
pumpage from wells near tidal rivers have caused
the eastern part of the state
Rhode Island: Heavy pumpage from wells Warwick in Bristol and Kent Counties and
near
near
and others,
(Atkinson
1986).
tidal rivers has caused sea-water intrusion
Providence in Providence
County (Atkinson
near
and others,
1986). South Carolina: Sea-water intrusion has occurred at several locations
including
areas in
along
the state's coast,
Charleston, Beauford, and Horry Counties (Miller and others, 1977; Atkinson and
others, 1986). Background concentrations of sodium and chloride in fresh ground water within the Black Creek
aquifer
of
Horry
and
Counties are less than 280
Georgetown
Concentrations above that may indicate mixing of fresh water with
mg/L
and 40
sea water
mg/L, respectively.
(Zack and Roberts, 1988 ).
The most extensive encroachment at present occurs in an area that extends from the Beaufort Basin to the Cape Fear Arch (Siple, 1969 ). The upper Eocene and
Oligocene deposits
are
subject
chloride concentrations of up to 8,500 ppm Texas: Sea-water intrusion is Arthur areas and around
Corpus
of Eocene limestones and the sub-sea contact of
to considerable salt-water encroachment, with maximum
( Siple,
occurring
Christi
zones
1969 )
in the Galveston, Texas
(Atkinson
and others,
City, Houston,
1986). Along
and Beaumont-Port
the Gulf Coast, sea water
mixes with surface water in the tidal reaches of the rivers, such as in the Calcasieu River channel, Calcasieu
Lake, Sabine Lake, and lower Sabine River (Krieger and others, 1957). Sea-water intrusion
occurs also
along the lower 36 miles of the Neches River and 3 miles of Pine Island Bayou (Port of Beaumont) during 6 months of the year. Salt-water barriers, which divert fresh water into a canal system upstream, cause this unhindered inflow of salt water; tidal action flushes the salt water back and forth below the barriers it to become
increasingly concentrated.
Deterioration of water quality is
the water way (Harrel, 1975 ). Sea-water intrusion from the Houston
causing
aggravated by waste disposal
Ship Channel
into
has been reported from
shallow wells between Baytown and Houston. Large withdrawals of ground water (525 million gal/d),
resulting
in a decline of artesian pressure
equivalent
intrusion over an area up to four miles wide at
to a 400 ft
Baytown
drop
of
hydraulic head,
has caused this
at a rate of several hundred feet per year
(Jorgensen, 1981 ).
Virginia: saline
ground
Sea-water intrusion due to the water has occurred in
overpumping
Northhampton
of fresh
and Isles of
ground
Wight
water in areas of shallow
Counties
(Atkinson
and others,
and in the areas of
1986)
Newport
Cape Charles ( Newport,
News and
historic
changes
wedge
of salt water coincident with the mouth of
1977). According to Larson
in chloride content of water wells are a local rather than
Chesapeake Bay
areas
cases
appears to be
a more
a
was
measured.
of sea-water intrusion have been documented in the Puget Sound
and along the Pacific Coast. Affected
Olympia, Kitsap County,
general,
,
extends into the York-James and
southern Middle Neck Peninsula, where the greatest chloride increase (175 mg/L)
Washington: Several
In
regional phenomena.
(1981)
include Island County, the
areas
and northern Jefferson
widespread problem
County (Kimmel,
areas
around Tacoma and
1963 ). While sea-water intrusion
in Island and San Juan Counties, it is of only local
significance in
Clallam, Jefferson, Renee, Thurston, and Whatcom Counties ( Dion and Sumioka, 1984 ). 3.4 Oil-Field Brine 3.4.1 Mechanism
This chapter deals with salt water that is
deep-basin
produced with
oil and gas. This water is naturally-occurring,
formation water that differs from the type discussed in
mechanism of
mixing with fresh water than through
its water chemistry. The
mechanism is that formation brines unassociated with oil and gas are water
by a
transition zone of
slightly to very
chapter
saline water, which
3.1 more
major difference
its
through in the
mixing
normally separated from fresh ground
normally
lessens the
degree of
natural
or
induced salinization. Anthropogenic contamination of fresh water by oil-or gas-field brine, in contrast, is not associated with a transition zone but instead water.
brings
concentrated brine into direct contact with fresh
Therefore, salinization of fresh ground water by oil-and gas-field brine is often very abrupt,
characterized
by large
There are
increases in dissolved solids within
currently
25
major
oil-and
relatively short time periods
gas-producing
drilling
country (Fig. 4 ).
states in the
more than one million holes have been drilled in search for oil and gas.
and short distances. In those states,
According to Newport (1977)
for oil and all other contamination hazards associated with the oil and gas
industry
are
,
this
major
contributors to salt-water intrusion in the inland part of the United States. Contamination hazards associated with the oil and gas salt water that is
produced with oil and gas.
with every barrel of oil in 1961
produced
( McMillion,
In Texas, 1965 ).
industry stem largely from the huge amount of
approximately 2.5 barrels of
Miller
(1980)
salt water were
produced
estimated that 4 barrels of salt water are
with every barrel of oil. Others estimate ratios of salt water to brine of up to 20:1, with ratios
generally increasing
as the
production of oil from
a
field decreases. In 1956, salt
the United States totaled 125 million tons, which is equivalent to
approximately
discharge in the United States (Thorne and Peterson, 1967). The total increases with time, as documented and more recent data
by early data reported by
reported by Michie
& Associates
Collins
(1988) (22
production
at oil fields in
one-half of the stream
amount of salt-water
(1974) (7.7 billion
billion barrels in
production
barrels per
1986).
year)
Production data
for 1963, listed state-by-state in Table 8 (Miller, 1980 ), identify Texas, Kansas, and Oklahoma
as
the three
Table 8. Methods of disposal of produced oil- and gas-field brine in the United States during 1963 (data from Miller, 1980 1980).). Current volumes State
produced
Alabama
Injection Injection water flooding disposal only
2,493
Arizona
_
Lined
pits
pits
Disposal Streams
_
Other
methods
603
539,132
89,082
340,734
California
2,740,850 202,194
445,768 131,500
208,665 5,000
Indiana Kansas
3,127 70
7,444
101,871
399,933 65,624
501
1,682,855
876,712 50,960
14,724
800,000
Montana
340,079 50.000
40.000 10.000
Nebraska
121,907
17,329
7,567
97,011
356,624
55,176
165,423
136,025
31.000
23,500 3,160,577
Pennsylvania
3,751,911 191,780
South Dakota
68
Kentucky Louisiana
Michigan Mississippi
Nevada
73,973 184,000
1,800 2,740
8,219
9.600 5,480 698,000
5,480 141,000
982
756
74,329 8.600
13,699
(A)
New Mexico New York
(A)
North Dakota Oho
2,785,000 149,587
982
15,132
4.200.000 35,616 1.762.000 147,849 203,836 31,400
5,011,400 123,287
7,500
(A)
Oklahoma
Texas Utah
West Virginia
583,280
5,370
2,685 191,780 68
6,127,671 81,634 115,068
2,736,755 2,981
23,682,022
7,821,601
1,472,954
1,262,719 4,862
615,566
39,677 73,790
115,068
Wyoming (A) Totals
(A) Brine
data not available;
pollution (B) (C)
Georgia (A) 876,712 81,797
brine
(B) (C) (B) (B) (C)
600
600
Illinois
Documented
100
Arkansas
Florida
Unlined
493
1,397
100
Colorado
Surface
(B) from Miller, 1980; (C)
9,182,173
see section 3.4.5
21,326
2,796,587
1,030,869
2,829,471
(B) (C) (B) (C) (C) (B) (C) (B) (C) (C) (B) (C) (B) (C) (C) (C) (B) (C) (B) (C) (C) (B) (C) (B) (C) (B) (C) (C) (B) (C) (C) (B) (C) (C)
largest producers
in the country,
making up more than
volume of brine
disposal
barrels per
Of this, 42 million were
injected
day.
50 percent of the total production. In 1986 the total
at oil and gas fields in the United States amounted to
injected
into
oil and gas formations, 17 million were
producing
an
underground
source
of
drinking
water is not present (primarily in the
San Joaquin Basin of California) (Michie & Associates, 1988 ). Assuming concentration of 50,000
mg/L in those waters, the disposal equals
Contamination of
ground
on the
disposal
percolated
method. Surface
disposal
and brine
ponding
high potentials
Texas, Louisiana, and California, where the largest amounts of brine to Miller
The
following
potential
ground. of this
produced
hazard is
in unlined surface
pits
highly have
of fresh-water contamination in
were
disposed of by this method
(1980) at least 17 oil-and gas-producing states (Table 8 ) have experienced ,
water pollution from disposal of oil-field brine, with time or another in all
into the
disposal
between brine and fresh water. This
mixing
been used widely in the past, which may have caused
(Table 8 ). According
conservative average TDS
water and surface water can occur where the
water is done in a way that allows
dependent
a
a total salt load of 8.6 million metric tons
into surface waters and of 5.8 million tons per year
deposited
per year
ground
60 million
into salt-water formations, three million were released into surface waters, and two million
percolated into the ground where
one
approximately
oil-producing
a
high
likelihood that contamination has taken place at
states.
sections will describe mechanisms that allow
mixing of oil-and gas-field brine with fresh
water.
3.4.1a. Surface disposal
Discharge of oil-field waters into coastal waterways, bayous, estuaries, and lakes
directly pollutes
will also occur.
to contaminate surface waters and
contaminating the
vadose zone and
At earlier times with little
Spillage
leakage through
from
disposal
( Krieger
post-oil-development
industry,
of the oil and gas
Kentucky,
increased from
potential
of
disposal
example,
pre-oil-development equal
chloride content in
levels of 10,600 tons in
to a 3,000 percent increase
of brines onto the land surface has caused
kill" areas in many old oil and gas fields in the past, and may still be a cause of serious
degradation of surface and ground water evaporation pits
were
could be reduced the Texas
has the
has the
the often indiscriminant disposal of
levels of 305,000 tons in 1959, which is
and Hendrickson, 1960 ). Indiscriminant
"vegetative
pit
drilling pits
ground water underlying the pit.
regulation
the Green River at Mundfordville,
and
the bottom of a
brines into surface waters caused severe contamination in many areas. For
1957 to
streams, creeks,
surface waters. Where these surface-water bodies are interconnected with
ground water, ground-water pollution potential
or into inland
introduced
by evaporation.
High Plains,
as a
As
as a result of
way of brine a
leaching. In
disposal
an effort to reduce water
pollution,
under the premise that the volume of brine
consequence, during 1961 alone, within the
more than 66 million barrels of brine were
disposed of
on the
Ogallala outcrop
of
surface, primarily in
unlined surface pits (Burnitt and others, 1963). This represented approximately 55 percent of that year's total brine production in the 500,000 acre-ft of brine communal
were
area. From a
single
oil field in Winkler
into
a
multitude of
point-contamination
mi2
an area of 13
were
disposed of in unlined pits
years of pit use, it was eventually realized that most of the disposed of
some
brine did not evaporate but infiltrated instead into the
Ohio,
or
disposal lake (Garza and Wesselman, 1959 ), adding millions of tons of salt to soils and causing
in 1969 ( Rold, 1971 ). After
a
more than
disposed of between 1937 and 1957 into unlined surface pits
contamination of local water wells. In Colorado, 27 million barrels of brine
creating
County, Texas,
was affected
the often porous
ground through
sources of brine. For
by brine pollution only
in the
example,
vicinity
of
pit bottom, Cardington,
three years after the first successful oil well
had been drilled. Disposal of brine into surface pits and indiscriminant surface dumping of salt water by contract truckers was the
pollution,
an
major
cause
of this contamination (Lehr, 1969 ). As
entire well field had to be abandoned. Similar uncontrolled surface
a
consequence of this
discharges were reported
by Baker and Brendecke (1983) in Utah, where water haulers may dispose of brine into unlined trenches, surface
depressions
on
undeveloped land,
Release of salt from soil
or into roadside ditches.
underlying former disposal pits can
affect
ground water for long times
and in
repeated plumes. Cyclicity of salt release from the soil is caused with every precipitation period that flushes salt from the vadose under
some
others under Texas
(Cl
pits a
even
pit
zone
into the saturated
(Cl
of 36,000
of 20,750 mg/L after 20
disposal pit in
This
many years after their abandonment,
in Ohio
concentrations return to
zone.
background
mg/L after 8 years) years).
Even
levels. Contamination of
southwest Arkansas covers an area of
as
and
longer
causes
extremely high salt concentrations
measured by Pettyjohn (1982) among
by Richter and others (1990)
time
ground water caused by an
area, Oklahoma.
Disposal pits
soil and ground water,
that have been used for only
especially
if
large
area
pit in
unlined surface-
mile and is estimated to last
for another 250 years ( Fryberger, 1972 ). The Oklahoma Water Resources Board
mi2
a
will be needed to see salt
periods
approximately one square
will take more than 100 years to flush all the salt from a 9
under
(1975 )
estimated that it
contaminated by pits in the Crescent
relatively
short
amounts of brine have been
periods
disposed
also
can
contaminate
of. For example, Lehr
(1969) reported contamination of ground water from two pits at Delaware, Ohio, which had been used for
only
15 months,
disposal,
during
which
chloride concentrations in
to more than
had received more than 225,000 barrels of brine. As a result of this
ground water increased from background
35,000 mg/L. A single pit
estimated that
one
pit caused
northeast Colorado. This 7 ft of
they
a
can cause
ground-water deterioration
on a
pit had
received
only
200 barrels of brine per
local fresh-water
aquifer ( Rold,
day
1972 ).
wide scale. Rold (1971)
but had been excavated into
1971 ). The amount of fresh water lost
to this kind of salinization can be substantial, such as in the case of Miller
disposal
mg/L
27 ppm per year salinity increase in the Severance ground-water basin of
gravel that directly overlay the
seepage from three
levels of less than 10
areas contaminated
approximately
60 million
County,
Arkansas, where
gallons of fresh water (Ludwig,
Often, highly These fluids are after
properly
360 million
saline fluids are also used in the oil and gas
temporarily
has been
drilling
ft3
stored in
pits
industry during
the
of boreholes.
drilling
and can cause fresh-water contamination if not
completed. Murphy
and Kehew
of brine have been buried in shallow
pits
(1984)
estimated that
in North Dakota
disposed
of
approximately
during pit closure, causing
variable degrees of soil-water and ground-water contaminations locally. 3.4.1b. Injection wells
Injection occurs in the
potentially
of salt water is done either for enhanced recovery or for brine
producing formation,
usable
however,
a
( Fig. 45 )
are
ground
hydraulic
water
which
typically
is not a fresh-water
(TDS 6,500
Classification
8-15 >15
Figure 56. Increase in TDS concentration in the Arkansas River alluvial flow (from Hearne and others, 1988).
aquifer as a result of irrigation-return
Figure 57. Use of Stiff diagrams for identification of water-quality changes as a result of agricultural activities: (a) (b) background water quality; (c) water affected by agriculture (from Denver, 1988).
whereas other trace elements, such as arsenic, cadmium, chromium, copper, lead, mercury, nickel, and zinc occurred below detection limits ( Waller and Howie, 1988 ). The
impact
experimentally by
of
flow on surface-and
irrigation-return
Law and others
(1970).
increases in TDS of between 8.5 and 32.2 the degree of change
being
ground-water quality
Surface-return flow after three
change between the June 28 and the July 18 irrigations ( Fig. 58a )
irrigation periods
irrigation applications.
was caused
which salt accumulated in the soil. The salt was dissolved and carried away with the
causing only water as
quality
slight
a
July
the irrigation
18 and the
season
Increases in soil
18
August
TDS increase in runoff after the third
is not reflected in water
percolating through
irrigation ( Fig.
the simple
and
by the relationship
between the
higher, up
18
July
a
to
irrigation.
A rain
alternating change
in
gradual TDS increase
twentyfold at
nonirrigated
and the
seen for sodium and
occurrences
are
a
depth of 18
to 24
associated with downward
of sodium and chloride with
depth ( Fig.
59b ). The
irrigated profiles was caused by salts brought in
by evapotranspiration. Sulfate, calcium,
depth relationship
( Fig. 59c ). Natural
by a dry period during
58a). This
the soil, as indicated by
at this site are many times
of salts, as shown
by the irrigation
The large
progresses ( Fig. 58b).
salinity
magnitude of difference
showed
in contrast, removed soil salts,
irrigations,
inches, than increases under nonirrigated land (Fig. 59a ). These increases
displacement
investigated
percent above irrigation-water concentrations ( Fig. 58a ), with
related to weather conditions between
event of 1.6 inches between the
were
and
magnesium
concentrations don't follow
chloride, but instead exhibit three significant peaks
and the solution of gypsum in the soil may control this distribution with
depth. The chemical of
an area.
For
composition of irrigation-return water reflects
example,
in the Yakima
Valley
of
local conditions and the
sodium and chloride concentrations show
Washington,
= 4.4;
higher net increases between applied irrigation water and outflow drainage (Nain/Naout 6.5)
than
magnesium
and sulfate concentrations
(MginMgout
Seabloom, 1963). The overall increase reflects drainage of because of
previous irrigation practices (Utah
irrigation history
=
2.0;
Clin/Clout
=
SO4in/SO4tout = 3.6) ( Sylvester and
an area
formerly waterlogged
and saline
State University Foundation, 1969 ). In the Grand Valley of
Colorado, in contrast, net changes between inflow and outflow show large increases in magnesium
(Mgin/Mgout = 11.4) Naout
=
2.5),
replacement minerals
(SO4in/SO4out = 10.8), a relatively small increase in sodium (Nain/ decrease in chloride loads (CIin/CIout = 0-6). This net change is due to
and sulfate
and even
a
of formation water in salt-rich shales and to reactions between
( Skogerboe and Walker,
Irrigation
and
water and soil
1973 ).
petroleum production
of south-central Kansas.
irrigation
account for ground-water deterioration in the
Irrigation-affected ground water is
characterized
High
by increased
Plains
Aquifer
concentrations of
calcium, magnesium, potassium, fluoride, and nitrate, whereas ground water affected by oil-field brine is characterized
by increased concentrations of TDS, sodium,
and chloride
( Helgeson,
1990 ).
Figure 58. Salt content in (a) irrigation water and irrigation runoff and in controlled irrigation experiments (from Law and others, 1970).
(b)
soil
during
and after three
Figure 59. Relationship between (a) TDS, (b) Na, Cl, and (c) Ca+Mg. SO4 and depth in soil under irrigated nonirrigated land. Downward displacement of salts occurs under both profiles, with differences in magnitude caused by salts brought in by irrigation, by evapotranspiration, and by the natural occurrence of gypsum in the soil (from Law and others, 1970).
and
3.5.4.
Parameters
Significant
Degradation
of ground-water
transport of chemicals, such waste water from animal return flow is the most
quality by agricultural
time,
important
reflecting
source
of
local conditions.
soil minerals
original
waste and
farms, and (c) irrigation-return flow. With respect to ground-water salinity, irrigation-
degradation. Evapotranspiration
are
and
leaching
components in drainage waters from irrigated
chloride and sodium concentrations show the
as
solution and
by (a)
herbicides, pesticides, and fertilizers, (b) disposal of animal
as
accounts for increases in most chemical
in some areas,
activities can be caused
highest increases, although parameters in
Significant
Typically,
areas.
other constituents may be
high
flow may change
over
irrigation-return
dissolved in the initial irrigation stage of
of soil minerals
an area
and minerals brought in by
irrigation water are dissolved in subsequent irrigation phases. A
significant parameter that differentiates agriculturally induced contamination from other salinization discussed in this report is nitrate. In agricultural areas, nitrate concentrations are often above
sources
background
values. Salinization associated with other sources, such as sea-water intrusion
or
oil-field
pollution, in contrast, is typically associated with increases in chloride, sodium, calcium, and magnesium concentrations and with small
3.5.5.
NO3/CI ratios.
State-by-State Summary of Agriculturally
The
following
associated with
magnitude
section
provides
summary of some of the
complete
but should serve as an overview of the
supplies
quality
has been
in
deep
and shallow
deleteriously
90 percent of all water
aquifers
affected by
consumption
that are
recharge
case where
of
in the state
(Sabol
and others,
Colorado River at Hoover Dam
caused
aquifer
irrigation-return water containing high contents of dissolved
depth to ground water is
contributed by
hydraulically
irrigated agriculture,
Basin of southeast Arizona, dissolved-solids concentrations in the alluvial result of
water-quality problems
problem.
Arizona: Ground-water
approximately
state-by-state This list is not
agricultural practices.
of the
surface water
a
Induced Ground-Water Problems
less than 100 ft
connected with
which accounts for
have increased
salt. This is
(Kister and others, 1966). Of the total
(9 million tons annually),
it is estimated that
In the Willcox
1987).
deterioration in the Wellton-Mohawk
Irrigation
and
especially the
salt load in the
approximately 37 percent
irrigation-return water (Jonez, 1984). Recycling of ground water for irrigation
water-quality
as a
Drainage
are
purposes has
District
(Effertz
and
others, 1984). Arkansas: As a
irrigation
general rule, approximately
is consumed and 25 percent returns to
75 percent of the
ground
aquifer systems (Holland
water removed for rice
and
Ludwig,
1981
).
Water-
quality deterioration from irrigation-return water has occurred along the Arkansas River (Scalf and others,
1973).
California:
Riverside,
is extensive
Agriculture
throughout
most of the Central
Valley, parts
of Imperial,
and San Bernardino Counties, and many coastal and Southern California counties
(Lamb
and
Woodard, 1988). Ground-water contamination by pesticides is widespread throughout these areas, indicated by a
(31 percent)
monitoring
were
survey of water wells from 1979
through
as
1984. Of 8,190 wells tested, 2,522
contaminated by pesticides (Lamb and Woodard, 1988). In the San Joaquin Valley,
selenium concentrations in agricultural drainage waters
are
high, exceeding 1 mg/L in
places
some
( Deverel and Gallanthine, 1989 ).
Approximately 32
million
gallons of
fresh water are used
(Miller, 1980 ). Irrigation water contributes
an average of
and Peterson,
the San
Joaquin Valley (Fuhriman and Barton,
and the Salinas Basin Colorado:
aquifer,
irrigation-return
(TDS
as
much
Irrigation-return
the San Luis
aquifer (Hearne
of the southern basins, such
1,000 mg/L)
as
as
water than
1988). Generally,
of excess
irrigation in
irrigation water and seepage
into the river
(Skogerboe
much as seven
times)
year)
increase in mineralization of surface and and others,
per year
reported from
ground
much
as
million
causes
2,500 mg/L)
1984 ).
ground
water in the
High
Plains
and the Arkansas River alluvial
aquifer,
water appears to be more affected
Valley,
insufficient
by
drainage
of
1900’s (Siebenthal, 1910 ). Approximately
early
Valley of western
Colorado. This contribution is
irrigation canals dissolving
irrigation purposes
(TDS as
Geological Survey,
and Law, 1971 ; van der Leeden,
for
has been
acre
of the total salt load in the Upper Colorado River Basin is
the Grand
from
saltjper
1984 ). Irrigation-return water also
Platte alluvial
shallow
saline soils had led to land abandonment in the 37 percent (700,000 to 800,000 tons per
irrigation
water. In parts of the San Luis
deep ground
attributed to saline flow from
result of
waters have caused TDS increases in
Valley aquifer system, the South
and others,
1.18 tons of
in the Ventura Basin
(U.S.
and livestock in California
imported irrigation water adds nearly 2
1971 ), where
Geological Survey,
tons of salt to soil and water each year (U.S. some
approximately
1967). Degradation of ground water as a
(Thorne
TDS increases in
daily for irrigation
1975).
The
salts and
repeated
a
result
subsequently discharging use of surface water
(as
within a 65-mi stretch from Denver to Kuner caused an
ground
water in the South Platte River
Valley (van
der Leeden
1975).
Irrigation
and feedlots contribute to
ground-water contamination
nitrate concentrations from animal waste
or
in Weld
fertilizer leachate have been
County ( Rold,
reported along
1971 ).
Black
High
Squirrel
Creek, the High Plains aquifer (Hearne and others, 1988), and in the San Luis Valley aquifer ( Edelmann and Buckles, 1984). Delaware: Coastal Plain nitrite,
aquifers
have been affected
from
farms
especially downgradient
problem
poultry
(Ritter
areas are located in Sussex and Kent Counties
background
levels as a result of
(Denver, 1988).
agricultural
by agricultural nutrients, and Chirnside,
(Denver, 1988).
1982).
such as nitrate and Most of the known
Other constituents above
activities include chloride, calcium, sodium, and
potassium
Florida: Of all the eastern states, Florida uses state’s rainfall is concentrated within crops
more or
heavy
use
a
by far the
most water for irrigation. This is because the
few months of the year, whereas the climate permits the
less year-round (Geraghty and others, 1973). Associated with long growing
of pesticides, which has affected
more
growing of is the
seasons
than 1,000 public and private water-supply wells (Inwin
and Bonds, 1988). In Dade
and
County, storage
concentrations of ammonia,
dumping
potassium,
and
of
agricultural
chemicals contributes more
organic nitrogen
in
severely
to high
ground water than does the application
of
these chemicals onto fields ( Waller and Howie, 1988 ). Illinois: It is estimated that 97 percent of all rural-domestic water systems
aquifers (Voelker and Clarke, 1988). These shallow aquifers
are
are
supplied from shallow
especially vulnerable
to contamination
by
irrigation-return waters. Kansas:
Irrigation-return
flows have caused increased concentrations of calcium, sodium, sulfate,
and chloride in
ground water of
north-central Kansas
Montana:
throughout
Agricultural practices
most of the state
contribute to the also
(see
ground water (Spruill, widespread
1985 ).
occurrence of
chapter 3.6). Irrigation-return
concentrations of nitrate have contaminated water wells in Rosebud
dryland
saline seep
flow with sometimes
County (van
high
der Leeden and others,
1975). Nebraska: Increased usage of
irrigation water may
Blue River Basins, the western parts of the Counties ( Exner and
Spalding,
Nevada: Contamination
irrigation-return water,
lead to future
in the
problems
Blue and Little
Big
Republican
River basin, and most of Box Butte and Holt
agricultural
sources in Nevada are caused
1979 ).
potentials
feedlot and
from
dairy-farm effluents,
and
agricultural
chemicals
by mineralized
(Thomas
and Hoffman,
1988). Large arsenic concentrations in ground water in parts of Churchill County have been traced to
irrigation-induced leaching of soils (Thomas and Hoffman, 1988). New Mexico: Ground-water connected with surface-water accounts for
problems
supplies
approximately 90 percent
have been
progressively in
(1,770 ppm), Texas, being nearly
(180 ppm), just below the Colorado-New Mexico deterioration from Oklahoma:
deleteriously
affected
a downstream
of
state line
irrigation-return
1970;
by about
van der
20 percent and in
percolating
are
hydraulically
by irrigated agriculture,
which
1987).
In the
(Sabol
and others,
direction, with the concentration
Bridge
( Fireman and Hayward, 1955). Water-quality Pecos River (Scalf and others,
1973).
waters identified several instances of surface and
ground-water deterioration. Compared with the quality of water applied, TDS increased
that
10 times the concentration at the Otowi
irrigation-return water has also occurred along the Investigations
aquifers
of all water consumed in the state
Rio Grande Basin, TDS content increases at Fort Quitman
in deep and shallow
soil water
by more
in
irrigation-water return flow
than 500 percent
(Law
and others
Leeden, 1975). Water-quality deterioration from irrigation-return water has occurred along
the Arkansas River
(Scalf and others, 1973).
Texas: In the Rio Grande Basin, TDS content increases a result of
TDS concentration at Fort Quitman, Texas,
irrigation-return flows.
the concentration at the Otowi
progressively
Bridge (180 ppm) just
in a downstream direction as
(1,770 ppm)
is
nearly
below the Colorado-New Mexico state line (Fireman
and Hayward, 1955 ). Water-quality deterioration from irrigation-return water has also occurred Pecos River
(Scalf
and others, 1973) where
some
10 times
wells in the
principal irrigation
along
areas of Reeves
the
County
have experienced significant increases in TDS (Ashworth, 1990 ).
Approximately considered saline in
parenthesis):
one million acres have been affected
(EC>4 milllimhos/cm).
Cameron
(275,000),
that
degree
Counties with more than 10,000 acres of saline soil are
Chambers
Jefferson
(350,000), Hudspeth (68,000),
to the
by irrigation
(20,000),
(10,250),
Culberson
Maverick
(44,000),
(10,000),
El Paso
Reeves
they
are
(acreage
(57,000), Hidalgo
(10,000),
San Patricio
(10,000), Ward (30,000), Willacy (10,000), and Zavala (50,000) (Texas State Soil and Water Conservation Board, 1984 ). Utah:
Irrigation-return water has caused
increased
salinity
of surface water in the Uinta River Basin
(Brown, 1984). In the Price and San Rafael River Basins of east-central Utah, irrigation-return flow led TDS increases from
(Johnson
and
River within
background
Riley,
stretch
area
irrigation wells
(Waddell
resulted in
and Maxell,
upward
and Peterson,
(Thorne
deterioration has occurred in response to
Enterprise
mg/L to contamination
levels of 2,000 to 4,000
mg/L
1984). The same process caused a TDS increase of 2,000 percent in the Sevier
200-mile-long
a
levels of 400 to 700
to
irrigation
1988),
1967).
Other areas where
ground-water
pumpage include the Pahvant Valley and the Beryl-
as well as the Curlew
movement of saline
Valley, where high
pumpage rates from
ground water from deep aquifers (Bolke
and Price,
1969 ).
Washington: Irrigation-return
flows with sometimes
high
contaminated water wells in the Odessa area and in Snohomish
concentrations of nitrate have
County (van
der Leeden and others,
1975). water in alluvial
aquifers
Rivers (Wyoming Department of Environmental
Quality,
Wyoming: Mineralized irrigation-return flows have contaminated ground
along
the Shoshone,
Bighorn,
and
Big Sandy
1986 ). 3.6 Saline
Seep
Salinization associated with saline seep is considered
agricultural sources because
of its
significance
in the Plains
separately
Region of the
from the
previous
section on
United States and Canada.
3.6.1. Mechanism
Saline seep nonirrigated
areas
was defined
that
by
Bahls and Miller
are wet some or
(1975)
as
"recently developed
saline soils in
all of the time, often with white salt crusts, and where crop
or
grass
production
is reduced or eliminated." It differs from salinization as a result of
the dominant salinization mechanism, that is, evaporation from
a
irrigation-return flow through
shallow water table accounts for high
salinities in saline-seep systems, whereas leaching of soil salts is the major mechanism that accounts for
high salinities in irrigation-return flows. Intensive studies of the saline-seep phenomenon in the United States have been restricted to the state of Montana,
even
the
though
problem
Northern Great Plains, saline seep causes loss of
more or
less
exists elsewhere. In many localities in the
productive farmland, impassable roads,
flooded
basements, stock deaths, and salinization of surface and ground water ( Custer, 1979 ). Conditions that favor
saline-seep development are widespread across the Northern Great Plains ( Fig. 6 ), covering an area exceeding 200,000 mi2 throughout most of North Dakota, approximately half the area of Montana and of South Dakota, and several Canadian
provinces (Bahls and Miller,
1975 ).
Several conditions have to be met for saline seep to develop, such as excess percolation of
recharge
water, soluble soil or
internally
drained flow system, and
creating
or
intensifying
natural vegetation and
drainage
as fallow
characterized
by optimal
environmental
changes,
cover
mostly
provides
low-permeable
a
ways (for example, by terracing of land),
adaptation
environmental
a certain
lost in monoculture
of
dry and wet periods
degree
of
systems.
protection
With
plant
characteristic of undisturbed systems is the efficient
significant
an
role in
by excessive irrigation,
periods.
plants.
This
A great
or
by
of water through the
spectrum of
diversity
adaptation
saline-seep development,
uptake
a
depths,
little water. Undisturbed ecosystems are
or hot and cold
to
play
covers that withstand a wide
to individual
regard
shallow
relatively
is often caused by destruction of
percolation
cropping or by planting of crops that use such as
unit at
activities often
evaporation. Agricultural
of these conditions. Excess
some
practices such
plant
aquifer minerals,
and
protection
the most
variety of
of natural is
important
natural
plants,
which prevents large increases in water-table elevation. Disturbed systems
are
uptake and allow
recharge the local ground-
a
greater portion of water to percolate through the soil and
to
often less efficient in
water flow system ( Bahls and Miller, 1975 ). Initial stages of saline seep are often indicated soil-surface wetness
following heavy
years of above average used up
steady
the
during
rains. Fallow areas can
undergo
spring precipitation (Miller and others, 1980). Although
growing
season, low stands of
increases in water levels over the
glacial till has been rising
an
previous
previous
years are
or
water will
move
occur
( Fig.
normally
Depending
on
not reached,
causing
years. In eastern Montana, the water table within the
average of four to ten inches per year (Bahls and Miller, 1975 ). Where the
60 ). A water table within three feet of land surface
up from this
during
some of this water will be
water table intersects or is close to land surface in response to these water-level
seepage will
by prolonged
a water-table rise of 1 to 15 ft
depth to the
surface
sodium-rich
as
1983 ).
along the flow path, water-logged or seepage
areas will be more or less saline. Minerals that are critical in salinization
pyrite,
signals potential problems,
by capillarity (U.S. Department of Agriculture,
the mineralogy of material encountered
the increased water table include
increases, water-logging
by excess percolating water and by
clays, carbonates,
gypsum, sodium and
magnesium
Figure 60. Diagrammatic cross section of ground-water flow with saline seep in topographically low topographic position (from Thompson and Custer, 1976).
and in intermediate
areas
sulfate,
and nitrate
( Thompson
the soil but are dissolved and increases the An
transported
salinity of discharge
percolation and by creating during drilling when
a
a
this shale
layer is generally
the shale
layer occurs within overlying glacial
zone
by
excess
water table. The presence of a
recharge. Evapotranspiration
perched
water table is indicated
encountered within 70 ft of land surface (Thompson and Custer, 1976 ). Where 30 ft of land surface, the
potential
for
saline-seep development
is very
high.
till is thicker than 30 ft, water-table elevation has not yet reached land surface correlation exists between soil texture and seep
a
80 percent of all saline seeps in that state
Approximately
are
controlled
occurrence.
by low permeabilities
of fine and
soils (Neffendorf, 1978 ).
Seep water may be locally, not regionally, derived, response to
(recharge)
areas
is penetrated before passing through powder-dry shale, in Montana,
( Bahls and Miller, 1975 ). In Texas,
fine-loamy
discharge
bound to
depths increases the potential of saline seep by preventing deep
perched
saturated
to
normally
water in seepage areas.
at shallow
impermeable layer
Where the
and Custer, 1976 ; Kreitler, 1979 ). These minerals are
precipitation.
The size of the seep
area ( Bahls and
as
(discharge)
indicated by the rapid rise in static water level in area is
directly
Miller, 1975 ). Recharge and discharge
areas
other and small in size or encompass thousands of acres. Runoff from surface-water quality. For example,
some
related to the size of the
upland
may be relatively close to each
discharge
of the largest rivers of Australia have
areas can
seen a
greatly impair
threefold increase in
TDS concentrations within the 50-year period from the 1910's through the 1960’s because of saline seep
( Peck,
1978 ). In southern Australia,
affected
saline seep as a result of
by
ha of
approximately 430,000 clearing
the
previously productive
indigenous vegetation
for
farming
farmland
are
purposes ( Peck,
1978 ). In some instances, saline seep is mistaken for oil-field
pollution
or for saline water
emerging
from
great depths along geologic structures. Characteristics that positively identify saline seep include during drilling,
wet material is encountered above a
rapidly
to
precipitation,
the water table reflects
local ground water rather than deep
recharge
areas
dry substrate, the static water level in saline seeps responds
ground
is typical for shallow,
topography, ground-water chemistry water, and changes in drainage
or
cropping practices
in
affect the size of seepage areas (Custer, 1979 ).
3.6.2. Water Chemistry
During
a field check of seep
conductivities
were
salinities, Custer (1979) noticed that seeps with low specific
most often associated with sandstone units
sandstones, whereas seeps with high specific conductance The increased salt content in the shale units
weathering
of
pyrite,
(up
or
were associated most often with shale units.
to 60,000 micromhos at
solution of carbonates and sulfates, and cation
1976 ). Oxidation and dissolution of
pyrite
creates
colluvium derived from nearby
acidity that
25°C)
is derived from the
exchange (Thompson
becomes available for
and Custer,
hydrolysis
reactions
and solution of carbonates
(Donovan
and others. 1981) and often leads to
in ground water. Breakdown of chlorite, illite, and
contributes
feldspars
high
selenium concentrations
Mg, K, Na,
and
SiO2
to seep
waters, which makes for a strong correlation between these constituents and TDS. Sodium is also derived from adsorbed
in smectites
positions
through exchange
(Donovan and others, 1981). Gypsum dissolution may be water with
(Miller
one
involving hydrogen
of the most dominant
and calcium ions
leaching
processes in
good correlation between SO4 and TDS ( Fig. 61 ). These chemical reactions produce
remarkably uniform water waters in
reactions
recharge
areas
and others,
chemistry
to
1980).
in Montana, from low-TDS (1,500 to 3,000 mg/L),
high-TDS (4,000 to 60,000 mg/L), Na-Mg-SO4 type
Sulfate concentrations of up to 33,000
mg/L
water in
Ca-HCO3 type discharge
salinization leads to
supersaturation
with
respect
many seep-water systems ( Fig. 62 ). Chloride concentrations are
constituents, such
as
most other
Saline-seep waters a dominance in
exception
normally relatively and Ag,
low but minor and trace
are
relatively high,
which
naturally saline ground waters (Bahls and Miller, 1975 ).
in parts of northeastern North Dakota differ from most seep waters in Montana
Mg-CI type
as
of
to calcite, dolomite, and gypsum in
NO3, Al, Fe, Mn, Sr, Pb, Co, Zn, Ni, Cr, Cd, Li,
distinguishes them from
areas
have been reported from test
holes in seep areas in the Fort Benton area, Montana ( Bahls and Miller, 1975 ). With the
recharge waters,
a
opposed to Na-SO4 type ( Sandoval and Benz,
1966 ). A
by
absence of
general
gypsum accounts for the low sulfate concentrations in those waters, which reach TDS concentrations of up to 34,000 ppm. Water-table elevations in salt-affected areas range from 1.5 to 5 ft ( Sandoval and Benz, 1966). Waters associated with saline seep in Australia are
Na-CI type, in contrast to
generally of the
saline seep in North America ( Peck, 1978 ). Oceanic salts found in rainfall may be these solutes
frequently
identified the minerals Loeweite
Major
chemical processes
figure
63.
occur on the
ground
operating
and Custer
at seep areas.
in saline seep
(1976)
used
Thompson
systems
Ca-HCO3
chemical below
waters
changes,
(Fig.
such as ion
dryland-farm
triangular diagrams (modified Piper diagrams)
exchange, involving Ca in Rapelje,
(Na2SO4).
Stillwater
recharge
areas to
County,
is of the
oxidation of
pyrite,
processes like
solution of carbonate minerals,
leaking
displaying
Na-Mg-SO4 type, with
discharge
the water and Na on soil
for
particles.
areas induces
Ground-water
Na-Mg-Ca-SO4 type,
concentrations of about 9,000 ppm (Thompson and Custer, 1976). Rock weathering is the
including
(1976)
Seep
64). Ground-water flow from
sites near
dissolved constituents,
of
and discussed above are summarized in
chemical characteristics of seep waters in Montana. These waters are typically of the some
and Custer
at several locations, Thenardite
(Na12M97(SO4)13) and,
3.6.3. Examples of Geochemical Studies of Saline
Thompson
important
dryland
source
and Gailitis, 1976 ; Peck, 1978 ).
(Hingston
White salt crusts
an
with TDS source
of
of formation water rich in sodium chloride,
exchange of calcium for sodium on exchange sites,
and
Figure
61. Correlation between
SO4
and TDS concentrations in seep waters from the Colorado Group, as the major contributor to salinity (from Donovan and others,
Montana, suggesting gypsum solution 1981).
Figure 62. Relationship between saturation states and salinity in well waters affected by saline seep, north-central Montana. Seep salinization typically leads to saturation with respect to calcite, dolomite, and gypsum (from Donovan and others, 1981).
63. Summary of chemical and transport processes Donovan and others, 1981).
Figure
operating
in a
saline-seep system (from
Figure 64. Modified Piper diagram of chemical composition of ground water in saline seeps, Montana. Seep water typically is of a Na-Mg-SO4 type as a result of sulfate-salt solution and ion exchange (from Thompson and Custer, 1976).
precipitation
of
calcium, sodium,
concentrations have been measured.
and
magnesium
Deep percolation
sulfate. Below cultivated of
recharge
water
land, high
during fallow
nitrate
years leaches the
nitrate into ground water. Below uncultivated land, in contrast, nitrate is absent in ground water and Custer, 1976 ).
( Thompson
Experimental leachates of cored material from seepage areas
areas
bear little similarity to actual saline-seep
(Donovan and others, 1981). Apparently, the chemistry of ground water is affected by underlying
bedrock
aquifer geology,
or
Ca/Mg
changes
the
dissolution and ion
laboratory. Gypsum constituents
which
to a
degree
that cannot be duplicated in the
are dominant processes
exchange
in some waters.
(Na, Mg, SO4)
composition
governing
bicarbonate concentrations and
High
ratios indicate that carbonate dissolution is additionally
an
the
major
roughly equimolar
important process in other
waters
(Donovan and others, 1981). High water tables and poor drainage conditions contribute of North Dakota. Ground-water
salinity of
type in moderately saline of a
areas. In contrast to
regional flow system
water from the Dakota
seep
areas in
sandstone, is the
weathering,
vegetation
but vertical
and others,
(Benz
and covered with white crusts, chemical characteristics are
quite
total salt content as well as sodium and chloride concentrations are contaminated areas than in
dryland
and
flow of saline
1961). pollution. Although
Rolling
Red Plains of Texas
being
the
void of any
different. In most instances,
appreciably higher
seeps. The difference in chemical
affected and unaffected soils in the Central
(Benz
Mg-Ca-SO4-CI
upward
soils are very similar, both often
seep-affected
Red River
salinity. This is indicated by the chemical similarity
source of
saline seep in Texas is often blamed on oil-field
visual appearances of brine- and
along the
Montana, this occurrence of saline water is part
instead of a local flow system; not
dryland
soils
in the most saline areas and of the
between Dakota Sandstone Formation water and seep waters The condition of
high salinity in
up to 40,000 ppm has been measured in some areas
Mg-Ca-CI-SO4 type
others, 1961). The water is of the
to
composition was
in brine-
between seep-
investigated by the U.S.
Department of Agriculture (1983 ). All major ions increase significantly in the soil within the upper few feet below seeps, A
reflecting evaporation.
variety
of salinization sources,
is known to occur in
and oil-field
pollution,
and others
(1990) developed
sources,
including
parts of
West Texas. In a
ground water (Cl
1,000
mg/L to
CIm =
»
1,500mg/L; Clp
50mg/L; CIs
■
(35,000-1,500)/(35,000-50)
The fresh-water
source
35,000mg/L
=
.96
=
is represented by 96 percent and the salt-water
is represented by 4 percent.
source
Step 2: Na^ with 0.96 ==»>
mixing water,
Y
«
=
-
600mg/L; Nap
*
155mg/L; Nas
-
22,000mg/L
(22,000-Y)/(22,000-155) 22,000
-
0.96*(22,000-155)
1,029
=
The theoretical sodium concentration in the mixing water is 1,029 mg/L; the actual concentration is
only 600 mg/L, however. Ion exchange may account for the loss of sodium, shows a
comparable gain to
application
of statistics
base and the nature of the
salinity
depends
required
of readily available statistical
as
another cation
to a
Techniques
high degree
on the number of observations in the data
information. For the purpose of this report,
techniques was attempted.
which is presented
Analysis,
long
its theoretical value.
6.2. Statistical
The
as
as one
The
exception
only
is made with
a
general
Stepwise
discussion
Discriminant
possible technique to identify useful parameters for identification of
sources.
Hem
(1985) pointed
procedures. chemistry
The
major
is needed to
out that the literature abounds with
reason for this
may be that
successfully apply
a
statistics
as a means
strong background
some of the more
water-quality studies. Generally, for investigation of
questionable applications
water
of statistical
in statistics as well as in water
sophisticated
statistical
techniques during
chemistry, Hem (1985) suggested the
use
of
of testing and verifying theories instead of simply creating theories from statistical
data. Statistical available.
techniques
are the most useful and
Simple averaging
or determination of
appropriate when
frequency
a
large data base of observations
distributions are
widely
used in
is
water-analysis
interpretation.
Both are
for identification of
a
good techniques
salinization process.
often given, which is then used to salinization
source.
in
establishing
Together with
the
an
background water-quality
average value, a maximum background value is
identify anomalously high
Frequency distributions
are used on
data often needed
concentrations caused by mixing with data bases to
large
identify
any outliers
or
a
to
determine the number of data populations that make up the total data set. Outliers may indicate
contamination, faulty analyses, from wells that
produce
result in more than one
or
data
from different
grouping
points
not
representative
of the rest of the data.
or from wells located in different
aquifers
of the data. This is
Analyses
geographic
derived
areas may
when sources of chemical changes are
important
investigated, because these data groups may be unrelated to each other. During mixing between
a
fresh water and
a
salt water, absolute concentrations vary to
whereas constituent ratios may vary relatively little. With only absolute concentrations will most often
provide enough
process, as concentrations exceed normal source is
present
and a
background
absolute concentrations may still suffice to
identify the
levels. If more than one
actual
identification of the
because of overlapping concentrations,
source
one
of
separation
depend on the composition of the
examining scattergrams
endmembers of salinization (for
of
highly
from sea-water intrusion (Fig. 35 ) show
chemistry.
When
plotting
scatter can be observed,
oil-field brines
as the concentration of a
or more
diluted
potential
mixing
sea
sources
waters. In such
of endmembers. Na/CI and Br/CI are two
(see also chapters 3.2
and
3.4),
but
individual endmembers involved.
potential
water, halite-dissolution brines, and oil-field brines), it
becomes apparent that some sources are more variable than others. or
salinization
ionic constituents versus chloride for various
major
example,
mixing,
true source of two
ratios that are known to work well in a number of salinization scenarios
nhen
potential
out. More often, however, absolute
in the case of
especially
cases, concentration ratios may have to be used for
which ratio works best will
present,
information for identification of the salinization
particular parameter may increase significantly and stand
positive
high degree,
source
difference in constituent concentrations exists between them,
significant
concentrations will not allow
potential salinization
one
a
relatively
tttle scatter,
together from
reflecting the different origins
Samples from
indicating
different areas
halite solution (Fig. 22 )
little variation in end-member
( Fig.
47), in contrast, much
more
and mechanisms of concentration of these brines.
From this it is apparent that differentiation between sea water and oil-field brines or halite dissolution and oil-field brines cannot be done constituents to be used for the
same manner as
the
using
chemistry
may be
ratios
distinguish
This technique
was
universal chemical constituent
or
constituent ratio. Instead,
between these brines will vary from one location to another in
of the oil-field brine endmembers
distinguishing
by trial and
provided by Stepwise
variables that
single,
differentiating
which constituents work best for
plotting or calculating
a
good separation
Analysis (SDA),
between two or more
One way to determine
between salinization sources in any
error until a
Discriminant
changes.
given
case would be
has been found. A more efficient way
which is a statistical technique that identifies
predetermined groups
of cases
(Dixon
and others, 1981).
used successfully by Hitchon (1984) to group formation waters in the Western Canada
Sedimentary Basin, by Hawkins
and
Copper
by Novak and
River Basin, Alaska, and
salt from brine
Motyka (1984)
identify the origin
to
Eckstein
(1988)
of mineral
determine those chemical constituents
or
between given groups of waters, such
oil-field waters and
as
in parts of the
to differentiate salt water derived from road
derived from oil fields in Ohio. In terms of water
samples
springs
constituent ratios that
chemistry,
can
be used to
useful for distinguishing
are most
sea water.
SDA
When dealing with contamination
of fresh water by salt water, the main mechanism changing the chemistry of the fresh water is mixing, which can a
also be considered as dilution of the salt water. In the case of dilution, absolute concentrations vary to whereas concentration ratios
high degree,
doesn’t
get
used in the In
using
a
little. Therefore,
generally
long
as
the solution
following
better tracers of salt-water sources than absolute concentrations and
discussion of SDA.
SDA, each predetermined group of samples consists of
a
number of chemical analyses made
variety of parameters, for example, major ions. Any parameter or, in this case, parameter ratio (for
example, Ca/CI, Ca/SO4, Mg/CI, etc.) that is specified will be used during values
as
too diluted and doesn't take on the ratio characteristics of the uncontaminated water,
concentration ratios are were
change relatively
representative
a linear function
example, Ca/CI)
of each group. The difference between the groups of interest is then expressed in
using
the differences between the group means of each
incorporated
analyses in
into this equation first.
each group will be
cases, some of the
analyses
difference between the to their
given
will be
groups
determined variable into the
equation.
until a maximum number of
analyses
improvement Depending
in
assigned
groups. In the next
preassigned
groups that are
similarity
relatively
members into the
to the
step,
mean
The ratio
(for
most distinct between
this step a certain percentage of the that is, parameter
of the opposing group. However, in most
opposite
depending
group,
SDA will attempt to
by incorporating
on the
degree
of
the
remaining
another ratio in combination with the
previously
correctly assign
The addition of ratios (variables) will continue in successive steps was
sample assignment can
on the
During
are
assigned correctly to their preassigned groups,
ratios are closer to the respective group mean than to the
analyses
parameter.
that best separates the groups, that is, for which mean values
the two groups, is individual
a SDA run to calculate mean
assigned correctly
be achieved
to its preassigned group and
by incorporating
additional ratios into the
no
further
equation.
between the groups, any amount of ratios will be determined, that is, two
similar may necessitate inclusion of many ratios for
assigned groups, whereas two very different groups
or two ratios. The variables determined
by SDA can then
may be
be used for further
To illustrate the usefulness of SOA for identification of ratios that
separation
of their group
distinguishable by just one
study.
distinguish
between
given
groups,
several data sets of water chemistry were compiled from the published literature. Data sets include oil-field
brines, halite-solution brines, sea-water intrusion samples, and ground water. Chemical analyses
grouped according ratios that best
(Table
to brine type and location and then used in a
separated these groups.
variety
were
of combinations to determine
Ratios used were those identified as useful in salinization studies
12 ) and for which dataware available
(Ca, Mg, Na, K,
HCO3, SO4, CI, Br, and I): scenarios tested
(a)
were
oil-field brine versus oil-field brine,
versus halite-solution
(b)
oil-field brine versus sea-water intrusion,
a known case of
brine, and (d)
(c)
oil-field brine
ground-water contamination by oil-field brine. The
SDA software used in the following example is part of the BMDP software package, which is commercially available from the license holder to be SOA was
representing
performed
mainframe computers
run on
all 15 possible combinations between any two of six oil-field brine groups,
on
brines from Texas, Louisiana, California, Oklahoma, Ohio, and Canada.
ratios selected
each run, Ca/CI,
during
identified (Table 15 ). It is
probably
Mg/CI, Na/CI, Br/CI,
that the other ratios may be useful Solution of halite water of
local can
samples
same
and I/CI were the ones most
type (oil-field
only on a site-specific
frequently
and sea-water intrusion
(chapter 3.2)
or
in other areas and
deep-basin brines)
basis.
(chapter 3.3)
each produce brine and saline
relatively uniform chemical character ( Figs. 22 and 35 respectively). Therefore, where ,
from sea-water intrusion or halite solution are not
be used as
Among the first three
reasonable to assume that combinations of these ratios will also provide
good separation power between brines of the
ground
PC’s.
or
hypothetical
readily available, samples from other areas
endmembers with reasonable accuracy. This was done for identification of
ratios that separate oil-field brine from sea-water intrusion brine in California, Texas, and Louisiana, and from halite-solution brine in Texas, versus
Pennsylvania,
oil-field brine, combinations of 7 (out of
a
and West
Virginia.
In the
possible 12) different ratios
of sea-water intrusion
cases were
determined
the best
as
four ratios in the three test runs ( Fig. 80), whereas in the case of halite solution versus oil-field brine, 10 ratios were identified
( Fig.
81 ). Some ratios appear again
as more
ratio in the case of halite solution versus oil-field brine, or the intrusion versus oil-field brine. It should be statistical point of view and not from is not
here that SDA determines ratios from
as
identifying
the source of
salinity
given to any
in water contaminated
variable determined
by any
through
Plotting of step ratios 3 and SDA logic,
as
these ratios
are
4 in bivariate
as
done in
Nevertheless, combining these ratios in bivariate plots
be used to
identify which
be done
graphically
endmember compositions group for their
potential
chapter 4 bicarbonate ,
more
by interactions ratio allows
the ratio may be of little
of these two sources. The same
as discussed in
figures
chapters 3.4,
and 4
.
80 and 81 does not follow the ,
can
support group separations. Once the
endmembers of salinization, these ratios can
endmember is the true source of
or
strictly
determined after and in combination with ratios determined in step 1 and in
ratios are known that best separate
can
plots,
samples,
a
statistical methods. In the case of Br/CI
ratios, geochemical considerations support the statistical evaluation,
2.
out in
its concentration is affected
between some oil-field brines and sea-water intrusion
consideration should be
step
ratio in the case of sea-water
aquifer material and CO2 with water than by mixing. Therefore, although the HCO3/CI
good separation in
HCO3/CI
geochemical point of view. As pointed
conservative constituent in ground water,
a
between
help
a
emphasized
useful than others, such as the Br/CI
salinity
in a contaminated
possibly then
ground
water. This
through the SDA feature of checking individual analyses for their similarity
(group means). First,
representativeness
SDA checks individual
samples within
to
each endmember
of that group, thus enabling the researcher to check the initial
Table 15. Listing of constituent ratios that separate best brines from Texas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, California, Ohio, and Canada, as determined through Stepwise Discriminant Analysis. Ratios were determined by individual runs of any combination between two brine groups, totaling 15 combinations between the six areas.
Sequence Sequence of Selection
Ratio
1,1.1.1.1,2. 2 1,1. 1.3.3 1,1,2
Ca/CI
Mg/CI Na/CI Br/CI l/CI
1.1.2 2. 3, 3, 3. 3, 3
HCO3/CI Ca/Mg
1.2.2
K/Br
1.3
Na/K
2. 3.3 2. 2 2,3 2,3
1.2
S04/(Na+K) Ca/Br
(Br/CI)/(Ca/Mg) SO4/CI
Na/Mg Ca/K C a/304
(Ca+Mg)/S04
2 2 3 3 3
Explanation: 1
2 3 *
Selected as the best ratio during any one run (step ratio #1), providing the single-most separation between two groups. Selected as the second ratio after step ratio #1 during any run, providing improved separation between two groups in combination with step ratio #1. Selected as the third ratio after step ratios #1 and #2 during any run, providing further improvement of separation in combination with step ratios #1 and #2, Of the 15 combinations between the six data sets, Ca/CI was selected five times as the first
step ratio and two times
as the second
step ratio.
Figure 80. Bivariate plots of ratios determined by applcation ot Stepwise Discriminant Analysis as the statistically best ratios to distinguish sea-water intrusion (sofid dots) from oil-field brines (open triangles). Ratios change according to the composition of oil-field brines, derived from (a) California (data from Gullikson and others, 1961), (b) Texas (data from Kreitler and others, 1988), and (c) Louisiana (data from Dickey and others, 1972).
Figure 81. Bivariate plots of ratios determined by application of Stepwise Discriminant Analysis as the statistically best ratios to distinguish halite-solution brine (solid dots) from oil-field brines (open triangles). Ratios change according to the composition of oil-field brines, derived from (a) Texas (data from Kreitler and others, 1988), (b) Pennsylvania (data from Poth, 1962), and (c) West Virginia (data from Hoskins, 1947).
If initial
grouping.
was done well and/or if the two groups are
grouping
member will be identified by SDA
as
distinct, each individual group
being representative of that group. If, however,
groups exists because of poor grouping and/or of chemical similarity, endmember may actually turn out to be the
mean
similar to the
more
some
an
overlap of
the two
samples within any
composition of the other group than
mean
to
composition of the originally assigned group.
This feature of SDA
apparently
contaminated
contamination a test case
(the
can
also be used to test individual group members of a third group (for
ground water) regarding
two groups for which
separating
their chemical
similarity
to
potential
example,
endmembers of
variables had been determined). This is illustrated with
of known oil-field pollution in Illinois, where salt-water disposal into pits and indiscriminant
dumping of brine has caused local ground-water contamination (Lehr, 1969 ). Considering oii-field brines from Illinois as one endmember of
(retrieved from STORET) Ca/CI
only
provide
mixing
and Illinois’
as the other endmember of
ground water with mixing,
chloride greater than 250
SDA determined that the ratios Na/CI and
the most separation power between the two groups, with Ca,
available parameters.
82a illustrates this
Figure
Mg, Na, SO4,
with oil-field brines
separation,
,
to the oil-field brine endmember than to the
were
identified by SDA
and Cl as the
generally plotting
lower ratios than most of the ground-water samples. Water samples from the contaminated >200 mg/L (data from Van Biersel, 1985 and Stafford, 1987)
as
area
being
area
were identified as
approximately 20 percent
water
samples
ground-water
similar to
ground water.
were classified as
endmember
( Fig.
being
At the same time,
having Cl 250 mg/L), Illinois oil-field brines (open squares; data from Meents and others, 1952), and ground water contaminated by oil-field brine (open triangles; data from Stafford, 1987 and Van Biersel, 1985 ). Ratios determined through the use of Stepwise Discriminant Analysis (SDA) effectively separate ground water from brines (a). Statistical evaluation of individual analysis using SDA identified all contaminated water samples and 20 percent of the ground-water samples (open dots) as more similar to brines than to ground water (b). ,
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