Ground-Water Flow Simulations And Geochemical Modeling Of The Madison Aquifer And Bear Butte Creek Watershed Of The Black Hills

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
A. D. Davis
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
6
File Size:
535 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1997

Abstract

The Bear Butte Creek watershed, in the northern Black Hills of South Dakota, shows the effects of past mining activities in the form of dissolved metals and arsenic in stream water. Bear Butte Creek, during normal flow periods, loses all of its discharge to sinkholes that recharge the Madison Limestone aquifer. This work focused on the geochemical transport and fate of arsenic and on understanding ground-water flow conditions in the Madison aquifer through development of a three-dimensional ground-water flow model that was coupled to a geographic information system (GIS). Stream sampling and discharge measurements helped determine sinkhole losses and loading rates. Column laboratory tests provided data on arsenic adsorption and the mixing of stream water with aquifer water, which also was simulated with the geochemical models, pHREEQE and NETPATH. The models and GIS can be updated with new information and will be useful in managing the water quality of the Madison aquifer.
Citation

APA: A. D. Davis  (1997)  Ground-Water Flow Simulations And Geochemical Modeling Of The Madison Aquifer And Bear Butte Creek Watershed Of The Black Hills

MLA: A. D. Davis Ground-Water Flow Simulations And Geochemical Modeling Of The Madison Aquifer And Bear Butte Creek Watershed Of The Black Hills. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1997.

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