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Wiley InterScience

Ground Water Monitoring & Remediation

Ground Water Monitoring & Remediation

Volume 25 Issue 2, Pages 107 - 117

Published Online: 27 May 2005

Journal compilation © 2009 National Ground Water Association



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Use of tracers and isotopes to evaluate vulnerability of water in domestic wells to septic waste
I.M. Verstraeten, G.S. Fetterman, M.T. Meyer, T. BullenS.K. Sebree
Copyright 2005 National Ground Water Association No claim to original US government works

ABSTRACT

 

Abstract

In Nebraska, a large number (>200) of shallow sand-point and cased wells completed in coarse alluvial sediments along rivers and lakes still are used to obtain drinking water for human consumption, even though construction of sand-point wells for consumptive uses has been banned since 1987. The quality of water from shallow domestic wells potentially vulnerable to seepage from septic systems was evaluated by analyzing for the presence of tracers and multiple isotopes. Samples were collected from 26 sand-point and perforated, cased domestic wells and were analyzed for bacteria, coliphages, nitrogen species, nitrogen and boron isotopes, dissolved organic carbon (DOC), prescription and nonprescription drugs, or organic waste water contaminants. At least 13 of the 26 domestic well samples showed some evidence of septic system effects based on the results of several tracers including DOC, coliphages, NH4+, NO3, N2, δ15N[NO3] and boron isotopes, and antibiotics and other drugs. Sand-point wells within 30 m of a septic system and <14 m deep in a shallow, thin aquifer had the most tracers detected and the highest values, indicating the greatest vulnerability to contamination from septic waste.


Received: 26 January 2005; Accepted: 20 May 2005;
DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1745-6592.2005.0015.x About DOI

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