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SIR2012-5282 Surficial Geology: Hydrogeology of the Susquehanna River valley-fill aquifer system and adjacent areas in eastern Broome and southeastern Chenango Counties, New York
The hydrogeology of the valley-fill aquifer system along a 32-mile reach of the Susquehanna River
valley and adjacent areas was evaluated in eastern Broome and southeastern Chenango Counties,
New York. The surficial geology, inferred ice-marginal positions, and distribution of stratified-drift
aquifers were mapped from existing data. Ice-marginal positions, which represent pauses in the
retreat of glacial ice from the region, favored the accumulation of coarse-grained deposits whereas
more steady or rapid ice retreat between these positions favored deposition of fine-grained lacustrine
deposits with limited coarse-grained deposits at depth. Unconfined aquifers with thick saturated
coarse-grained deposits are the most favorable settings for water-resource development, and three
several-mile-long sections of valley were identified (mostly in Broome County) as potentially favorable:
(1) the southernmost valley section, which extends from the New YorkPennsylvania border to about
1 mile north of South Windsor, (2) the valley section that rounds the west side of the umlaufberg
(an isolated bedrock hill within a valley) north of Windsor, and (3) the eastwest valley section at the
Broome County Chenango County border from Nineveh to East of Bettsburg (including the lower reach
of the Cornell Brook valley). Fine-grained lacustrine deposits form extensive confining units between
the unconfined areas, and the water-resource potential of confined aquifers is largely untested.Recharge,
or replenishment, of these aquifers is dependent not only on infiltration of precipitation directly on
unconfined aquifers, but perhaps more so from precipitation that falls in adjacent upland areas.
Surface runoff and shallow groundwater from the valley walls flow downslope and recharge valley
aquifers. Tributary streams that drain upland areas lose flow as they enter main valleys on permeable
alluvial fans. This infiltrating water also recharges valley aquifers.Current (2012) use of water resources
in the area is primarily through domestic wells, most of which are completedin fractured bedrock in
upland areas. A few villages in the Susquehanna River valley have supply wells that draw water from
beneath alluvial fans and near the Susquehanna River, which is a large potential source of water from
induced infiltration.
Complete Metadata
| @id | http://datainventory.doi.gov/id/dataset/676a5792a800c70f5c0be780e74a38b1 |
|---|---|
| bureauCode |
[ "010:12" ] |
| identifier | USGS:3eb24ebe-0867-41ec-bd77-60140f131a9b |
| spatial | -75.844489,41.950064,-75.324973,42.411385 |
| theme |
[ "geospatial" ] |