The Edwards Aquifer: The Past, Present, and Future of a Vital Water Resource
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The Edwards aquifer system is one of the great karstic aquifer systems of the world. It supplies water for more than 2 million people and for agricultural, municipal, industrial, and recreational uses. The Edwards (Balcones Fault Zone) Aquifer in the San Antonio, Texas, area was the first to be designated a sole source aquifer by the Environmental Protection Agency in 1975. The Edwards Aquifer also hosts unique groundwater, cave, and spring ecosystems. This 27-chapter memoir reviews the current state of knowledge, current and emerging challenges to wise use of the aquifer system, and some of the technologies that must be adopted to address these challenges.
Aquifer storage and recovery in the Edwards Aquifers, Texas Available to Purchase
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Published:September 10, 2019
ABSTRACT
Aquifer storage and recovery (ASR) is a proven water-supply strategy that uses an aquifer to store surplus water that will be available for later use when that stored water is needed. Although only three ASR systems are currently operating in Texas, recent incentives from the state, along with changes in regulatory framework, have helped to encourage consideration of ASR as a viable water-supply strategy. The changes in Texas law primarily reduced the power of groundwater conservation districts to regulate ASR, and they put the majority of the role of project authorization in the hands of the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality.
Two Edwards-named aquifers in Texas were considered in this work: the Edwards-Trinity (Plateau) and the Edwards (Balcones Fault Zone) Aquifers. Both of the aquifers have areas that appear to be suitable, from a hydrogeologic standpoint, for ASR. The Edwards hydrostratigraphic unit of the Edwards-Trinity (Plateau) Aquifer has generally good productivity and water quality. However, in some locations, the high natural gradient combined with low porosity may increase the design challenge due to bubble drift. These same characteristics exist in many areas of the freshwater portion of the Edwards (Balcones Fault Zones) Aquifer, although its high productivity makes for very attractive per-well recharge and recover rates. The lower natural gradient (and thus smaller potential for bubble drift) in the brackish portion of the Edwards Aquifer may make it a good candidate in areas where productivity is sufficient.