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Ground Water Supply for a State Park in Pennsylvania
This article presents the Gifford Pinchot Park water supply development as a typical example of developing facilities in areas where land availability, dam site, reservoir site, geographic location, timing of use, and budgetary requirements are not suited to the best possible measures for supplying water. This park is located on strata that have proved to be poor aquifers, but budgetary considerations require the use of possible groundwater supplies. This study further demonstrates the difficulty of obtaining well production information in areas more or less remote from developed water facilities, and demonstrates the variable quality of available information, most of which is not written, recorded, or filed with a central agency. Solving this water supply problem also shows how a careful study of discoverable engineering information, such as well location, depth, strata penetrated, and production data, along with such information as geologic history, structure, and lithology, can improve a well‐drilling program geared to the economic and geographic restrictions placed on the project.
Ground Water Supply for a State Park in Pennsylvania
This article presents the Gifford Pinchot Park water supply development as a typical example of developing facilities in areas where land availability, dam site, reservoir site, geographic location, timing of use, and budgetary requirements are not suited to the best possible measures for supplying water. This park is located on strata that have proved to be poor aquifers, but budgetary considerations require the use of possible groundwater supplies. This study further demonstrates the difficulty of obtaining well production information in areas more or less remote from developed water facilities, and demonstrates the variable quality of available information, most of which is not written, recorded, or filed with a central agency. Solving this water supply problem also shows how a careful study of discoverable engineering information, such as well location, depth, strata penetrated, and production data, along with such information as geologic history, structure, and lithology, can improve a well‐drilling program geared to the economic and geographic restrictions placed on the project.
Ground Water Supply for a State Park in Pennsylvania
Montgomery, Hugh B. (Autor:in)
Journal ‐ American Water Works Association ; 54 ; 68-74
01.01.1962
7 pages
Aufsatz (Zeitschrift)
Elektronische Ressource
Englisch
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