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Glacial Geology and Aquifer Characteristics of the Big River Area, Central Rhode Island

Water-Resources Investigations Report 01-4169

By JANET RADWAY STONE and DAVID C. DICKERMAN

INTRODUCTION

The Rhode Island Water Resources Board (RIWRB), which is responsible for developing the State's major water resources, is concerned that continued growth in demand for water in Rhode Island will severely stress water supplies. In the early 1960s, the State proposed construction of a surface-water reservoir in the Big River Basin in central Rhode Island to meet the growing water demands, but, to date (2001) the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has not given approval for construction of this reservoir. As an alternative, the RIWRB would like to identify sites in the Big River area stream-aquifer system where high-yield supply wells can be constructed to meet future water demands. A cooperative study was initiated during the summer of 1995 by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and the RIWRB to evaluate ground water as a source of water supply in the Big River area.

This report presents the initial results of a multi-year investigation of the three-dimensional characteristics of the surficial aquifer system based on geologic and geophysical field studies, and provides information needed to protect, develop, and manage the Big River area stream-aquifer system. The Big River area includes the entire Big River drainage basin and part of the Mishnock River drainage basin (fig. 1) and covers approximately 35 mi2, including parts of the towns of Coventry, Exeter, and West Greenwich. Most of the Big River area is in Kent County, with a small part in Washington County; it encompasses parts of the Coventry Center, Hope Valley, Crompton, and Slocum 7.5-minute quadrangles.

This investigation includes a characterization of the geologic framework and an evaluation of the hydraulic properties of the stream-aquifer system. The Big River area stream-aquifer system is the surficial aquifer and the network of rivers, brooks, lakes, and ponds that overlie and are in hydraulic connection with the aquifer. The surficial materials units of the Big River area and the accompanying bedrock-surface contours (pl. 1) were delineated on the basis of data collected during field mapping, seismic-refraction surveys, ground-penetrating radar surveys, logs from all available wells and test holes, and results of previous investigations.

Some streams in the study area lose surface water naturally to the underlying sand and gravel aquifer, whereas others lose water to the aquifer by induced infiltration of streamflow caused by ground-water withdrawals. Most large ground-water withdrawals are from public-supply wells in the sand and gravel aquifer in the Mishnock River Basin. Minimal ground-water withdrawals take place in the Big River Basin, because most of the land is designated as open space and protected from development by State law. The primary use of surface water in the study area is for recreation. Water from the Flat River Reservoir, the largest surface-water body in the study area, is used only for recreational purposes.

CONTENTS

Introduction

Acknowledgments
Previous Studies
Topography and Drainage
Bedrock

Glacial Geology

Distribution of Surficial Materials
Till
Meltwater Deposits
Glacial Lakes and Ice-Margin Position during Deglaciation
Postglacial Deposits

Aquifer Characteristics

Till
Stratified Deposits

Hydraulic Properties of the Sand and Gravel Aquifer
Aquifer Tests

References

FIGURES

  1. Location of study area and major drainages in the Big River area, Rhode Island
  2. Glacial lakes and ice-margin positions during deglaciation, Big River area

TABLE

  1. Surficial materials, well-construction characteristics, and hydraulic properties determined from aquifer tests in the Big River area, Rhode Island

PLATE

Surficial Materials Map of the Big River Area, central Rhode Island


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Whole Report (1 MB) -- 16 pages

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