The hydrogeology of Moab-Spanish Valley, Grand and San Juan Counties, Utah, with emphasis on maps for water-resource management and land-use planning (SS-120)

SS120
In stock
Utah Geological Survey Special Studies
$24.95
Media Type *
$24.95

By: M. Lowe, J. Wallace, S. M. Kirby, and C. E. Bishop

Contains a 40-page report with an 83-page appendix and 12 maps that address ground-water conditions in Moab-Spanish Valley’s valley-fill aquifer and provide recommendations for water-resource management and land-use planning. The maps are described in detail in the report and show geology; Glen Canyon Group depth, thickness, ground-water compartments, and fractured characteristics; valley-fill thickness; recharge and discharge areas; total-dissolved-solids concentration; nitrate concentration; ground-water quality class; potential contaminant sources; and recommended lot size.

Moab and Spanish Valleys are two contiguous valleys in southeastern Utah, herein referred to as Moab-Spanish Valley. Moab-Spanish Valley is a semirural area in Grand and San Juan Counties that is experiencing an increase in residential development. While most of the development in the Grand County portion of Moab-Spanish Valley is on a community sewer system, development in the San Juan County portion uses septic tank soil-absorption systems for wastewater disposal. Many of these septic-tank systems are on valley-fill deposits that are a drinking-water aquifer for the area. The purpose of our study is to provide tools for water resource management and land-use planning; to accomplish this purpose we (1) characterize the relationship of geology to ground-water conditions in the Glen Canyon and the unconsolidated valley-fill aquifers, (2) classify the groundwater quality of the Glen Canyon (east of the valley only) and valley-fill aquifers to formally identify and document the beneficial use of ground-water resources, and (3) apply a ground-water flow model using a mass balance approach to determine the potential impact of projected increased numbers of septic-tank systems on water quality in the valley-fill aquifer and thereby recommend appropriate septic-system density requirements to limit water-quality degradation.

Other Information:
Published: 2007
Pages: 40 p. + 83 p. appendix
Plates: 12 pl.
Scale: 1:50,000 and 1:100,000
Location: Grand and San Juan Counties

The cookie settings on this website are set to 'allow all cookies' to give you the very best experience. Please click Accept Cookies to continue to use the site.
You have successfully subscribed!