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Last modified
1/26/2010 12:32:03 PM
Creation date
10/11/2006 10:35:23 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
Water Supply Protection
File Number
8170
Description
Arkansas Basin Water Quality Issues
State
CO
Basin
Arkansas
Date
3/14/1997
Author
Bradford Austin
Title
Report to the Commissioner of Agriculture - Ground Water Monitoring Activities - Arkansas River Valley Alluvial Aquifer 1994-1995
Water Supply Pro - Doc Type
Report/Study
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<br />I <br />. <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />. <br />. <br />I <br />. <br />. <br />I <br />. <br /> <br />. <br /> <br />I <br /> <br />I <br />I <br /> <br /> <br />\. <br /> <br />1402 <br /> <br />1995 CONFIRMATION SAMPLING <br /> <br />In August 1995, a confirmation sampling program was conducted to confirm pesticide <br />detections and elevated nitrate levels measured in 1994, Analysis of the nitrate data had <br />indicated nineteen (19) wells in three areas where nitrate levels exceeded the drinking water <br />standard of 10,0 mgIL. The pesticide data revealed twelve (12) wells with Atrazine, one well <br />with Metolachlor and Atrazine, and another with 2,4-D, <br /> <br />The confirmation sampling program consisted of resampling thirty two (32) wells that <br />had shown either a pesticide detection or nitrate level above the standard in the 1994 <br />sampling, The resampling program was designed to determine if the contamination originally <br />detected was representive of the groundwater quality at that site or only a conincidence of <br />timing of the sampling, The only change in field or laboratory procedures from 1994 to 1995 <br />was a decrease in the method detection level for Atrazine from 0.5 to 0,1 micrograms per liter <br />or parts per billion, The lowest level of Atrazine which the laboratory could quantify was thus <br />more sensitive by a factor offive, As a result, those detections reported as traces (atrazine <br />present in the sample, but to low to quantii)') in 1994 are reported in micrograms per liter in <br />the 1995 data, <br /> <br />Twenty eight (28) weBs were sampled in 1995, Two weBs sampled in 1994 were out <br />of service when revisited in 1995, and the sampling of two others could not be scheduled <br />within the allowable time frame, Table 3 summarizes the 1995 results and compares them to <br />the previous year, The 1995 results confirmed the quality of the 1994 field and laboratory <br />work. Of the nineteen (19) weBs that had nitrate levels in excess of the EP A drinking water <br />standard of 10 mgIL in 1994, four decreased below the standard, Two wells resampled for a <br />pesticide detection increased above the standard, The high mobility of nitrate combined with <br />this hydraulically active ground water system can produce significant swings in nitrate <br />concentrations from year to year, But overall, the differences between the 94 and 95 values <br />are statistically insignificant. The resampling indicates little or no change in nitrate levels from <br />one year to the next in those weBs that were sampled both years, The data does demonstrate <br />the fluctuations one can nonnally expect in ground water nitrate concentrations, and confirms <br />that if proposed action is tied to a numerical standard, long tenn monitoring is recommended, <br /> <br />The pesticide resampling showed four weBs with a trace amount of Atrazine (up to but <br />not over 0.49 ugIL) in 1994, falling below the 1995 detection limit of 0,1 ugIL, One weB <br />resampled for nitrate picked up a hit of Atrazine, Another well increased from a trace level to <br />4,20 ugIL which is over the standard of3,O, This is the only occurrence of pesticides at or <br />above a water quality standard in the Arkansas Valley survey, <br /> <br />10 <br />
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