Folks,
The Edwards Aquifer Authority recently released a report titled Tracing 
Groundwater Flowpaths in the Edwards Aquifer Recharge Zone, Panther Springs 
Creek Basin, Northern Bexar County, Texas.  A copy of the report can be viewed 
as a PDF at the Authority's Web page  at 
www.edwardsaquifer.org<http://www.edwardsaquifer.org>
The report can be directly viewed at the following location:
http://www.edwardsaquifer.org/display_science_research_s.php?pg=fmsreports

Report Description

The purpose of this study was to characterize groundwater-flow directions and 
velocities and to evaluate hydrostratigraphy in the Edwards Aquifer recharge 
zone in northern Bexar County in south-central Texas. It presents the findings 
of investigations by the Edwards Aquifer Authority regarding groundwater 
flowpaths, velocities, and hydrostratigraphy in the Panther Springs Creek 
groundwater basin, which is located in the San Antonio segment of the Balcones 
Fault Zone Edwards Aquifer. In a series of four phases, the Authority injected 
nontoxic organic dyes into six caves and sampled an array of 32 wells to track 
the dye movements. The tracer tests revealed discrete groundwater flowpaths 
near Panther Springs Creek with apparent (point-to-point) groundwater 
velocities ranging from 13 to 5,300 meters per day from the recharge zone to 
the transition/artesian zone of the Edwards Aquifer. The results indicated that 
groundwater flows freely across faults with displacements up to 104 meters 
through a single hydrostratigraphic unit comprised of the upper member of the 
Glen Rose Formation in the Upper Trinity Aquifer and the overlying Edwards 
Aquifer. Dye poured on the ground surface in an area with no observable karst 
features such as sinkholes, dissolutioned fractures, or caves demonstrated that 
the aquifer is vulnerable to contamination even in the absence of recognizable 
karst landforms.


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