For
immediate release:
January 23, 2012
East-central
Iowa Groundwater Study AND PREDICTIVE MODEL COMPLETED
MEDIA
CONTACTS: Mike Gannon, [log in to unmask], or Bob
Libra [log in to unmask],
for both call 319-335-1575
The
DNR Iowa Geological and Water Survey (IGWS) recently completed a groundwater
study and predictive model for the Silurian aquifer in east-central Iowa.
Information from thousands of well records, hundreds of water production tests,
current and historic water levels, and water withdrawal records were
incorporated into a groundwater model. The completed and tested model will give
estimates of the changes in water levels into the future for a wide range of
anticipated or possible future demands.
“The
Silurian aquifer is an important groundwater source in eastern Iowa,” said Mike
Gannon, an IGWS research geologist who coordinated development of the model.
“It’s widely used by cities, industries, farms and rural communities, and also
supplies geothermal wells.”
As the
study was being completed, the model was used to assist Marion and Coralville in
assessing long-term additions to their water supplies.
The
Silurian study follows work done on the Dakota aquifer in northwest Iowa,
shallow alluvial aquifers in several parts of Iowa, and the deep Jordan aquifer
across the state.
“This
effort is the key to long term management of our underground water supplies”
says Iowa’s State Geologist Bob Libra. “The decisions we make about water
development today will be with us for decades, and this work helps assure the
investments made for water will pay off for the long run. The studies will also
allow us to assess and predict the impacts of developing drought conditions in
western Iowa.”
The
report on the aquifer is available at: ftp://ftp.igsb.uiowa.edu/igspubs/pdf/WRI-5.pdf.
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