- Floridan Aquifer
The Floridan Aquifer is a portion of the principal
artesian aquifer that extends intoFlorida [cite web
url=http://aquat1.ifas.ufl.edu/guide/aquifers.html
title=Florida aquifers - Plant Management in Florida Waters
publisher=aquat1.ifas.ufl.edu
accessdate=2008-06-01
last=
first=] and is composed ofcarbonate rock and located beneath the coastal regions of theSoutheastern United States and is one of the world's most productive aquifers. [ [http://capp.water.usgs.gov/gwa/ch_g/G-text6.html USGS Ground Water Atlas of the United States HA 730-G] ] It is under all of Florida as well as large parts of coastal Georgia and areas of coastalAlabama andSouth Carolina . (See figure)History
In 1936,
geologist Victor Timothy Stringfield first identified the existence of Floridan Aquifer in peninsular Florida and referred to the carbonate units as the "principal artesian formations." In 1944, M. A. Warren of the Georgia Geological Survey described an extension of this system in south Georgia and applied the term "principal artesian aquifer" to the carbonate units involved. In 1953 and 1966 Stringfield also applied the term "principal artesian aquifer" to these rocks. In 1955,Garald G. Parker noted thehydrologic and lithologic similarities of theTertiary carbonate formations in southeast Florida, concluded that they represented a single hydrologic unit, and named that unit the "Floridan aquifer."Location
The Floridan aquifer, as opposed to
surficial aquifer s, is the portion of the principal artesian aquifer that extends intoFlorida , parts of southernAlabama , southeastern Georgia, and southernSouth Carolina . In Florida it supplies the cities of Daytona, Flagler Beach, Gainesville, Jacksonville, Ocala, St. Petersburg, and Tallahassee and numerous rural communities.Hydrology
The principal artesian aquifer is the largest, oldest, and deepest aquifer in the southeastern U.S. Ranging over 100,000 square miles, it underlies all of Florida and The Floridan portion developed millions of years ago during the late
Paleocene to earlyMiocene periods, when Florida was underwater.Wakulla Springs in Wakulla County, Florida is one of a number of major outflows of the Floridan with a flow rate of 200-300 million gallons of water a day. A record peak flow from the spring onApril 11 ,1973 was measured at 14,324 gallons (54,226 liters) per second - equal to 1.2 billion gallons (4.542,494) cubic meters) per day.Groundwater in the Floridan aquifer is contained under pressure by a confining bed of impermeable sediments. When the water pressure is great enough, the groundwater breaks to the surface and a spring flows. Water temperature and flow from a Floridan spring is relatively constant.
In general, as the water flows through the Florida aquifer systems it matures. The water quality becomes more
alkaline and thesulfate content increases as does the amount of dissolved solids.cite book
first=Douglas Sl Jones, (Eds)
last=Anthony F. Randazzo
year=1997
title=The Geology of Florida
edition=
publisher=University Press of Florida
location=
pages=pp. 82–88, 238
id=ISBN 0-8130-1496-4]ee also
*
Hydrogeology
*Aquifer andWater table
*Groundwater References
* [http://sofia.usgs.gov/publications/papers/pp1403a/flaqsys.html U.S. Geologic Survey]
External links
* [http://capp.water.usgs.gov/aquiferBasics/floridan.html USGS Aquifer study]
* [http://www.tfn.net/springs/Springbook/FirstMagnitude.htm List of First-Magnitude Springs in Florida]
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