USGS And The Idaho Department Of Water Resources
To Measure Water Levels In 1,300 Wells
3/28/2008
Reston, VA — Between March 31 and April 11, employees of the U.S. Geological
Survey (USGS), working in cooperation with the Idaho Department of Water
Resources (IDWR), will measure ground water levels in more than 1,300 wells
throughout southern Idaho’s eastern Snake River Plain. The eastern Snake
River Plain aquifer, with an estimated volume of 200 billion cubic feet, is
the area’s chief source of drinking water, provides irrigation for one
million acres of farmland, and is the water source for the state’s
aquaculture industry.
The data collected from this large-scale measurement will help water
resources managers understand the status of the aquifer as the state enters
the April-September water year. In addition, the IDWR will use the data to
continue improving their computer model of the aquifer. The IDWR wants to
conduct this type of "mass measurement" once every five years at both the
beginning and the end of the irrigation season.
"The mass measurement is like taking a snapshot of the current state of the
aquifer," said IDWR Hydrology Section Manager Sean Vincent. "The USGS and
IDWR would greatly appreciate well owners' cooperation in the study by
granting them access to their wells. Privately-owned wells are a valuable
source of information. The more wells from which information can be
gathered, the better the assessment of the current state of the aquifer will
be."
USGS employees will carry official government identification. The USGS
technicians will spend a few minutes with well owners to ask about any
changes the owner has made to the well since the last measurement and how
long it has been since the well was last pumped. The technicians will then
measure the water level in the well using a steel tape or an electronic
water level meter, and they will report the results to the well owner.
For more information about this study, please contact either Sean Vincent at
the Idaho Department of Water Resources or Annette Campbell at the USGS
Idaho Water Science Center.
SOURCE: USGS
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