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Sunday, July 7, 2024
HomeBusinessWell sampling planned in Lake County for groundwater atlas

Well sampling planned in Lake County for groundwater atlas

The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources will collect wa­ter samples from about 90 wells in Lake County to develop the Groundwater Atlas of Lake Coun­ty.

The process involves collecting a water sample from an outside spigot or hydrant for laboratory analysis. Dozens of different water components are analyzed to deter­mine the natural chemistry of local aquifers. Participation is voluntary, and well owners will receive a re­port of the laboratory results at no cost. While sample well locations will appear on atlas maps, contact or ownership information will not be included.

The DNR will soon be contacting selected well owners by mail with a request for permission to sam­ple their wells. Wells are chosen based on geology, location, well depth and well construction. Par­ticipation will help hydrologists create county maps and descrip­tions of groundwater distribution, movement, conditions, and aquifer pollution sensitivity. The atlas and maps will be printed and shared online, and geographic informa­tion system files will be available for download.

The groundwater atlases help identify viable drinking water sources, support sustainability, guide well and septic system con­struction decisions, inform well-head protection efforts for public water supplies, highlight regional recharge and groundwater move­ment, and assess pollution sensi­tivity and possible contaminant migration. Neither well sampling nor the atlases are used to regulate individual well owners.

The Groundwater Atlas of Lake County should be completed in 2026. It is Part B of a two-part se­ries. Part A, the geology of Lake County, was completed by the Minnesota Geological Survey in 2022.

The County Atlas Program is funded in part by the Minnesota Environment and Natural Resourc­es Trust Fund, as recommended by the Legislative-Citizen Commis­sion on Minnesota Resources.

A description of the program and completed atlas products are avail­able on the DNR website (mndnr.gov/groundwatermapping).

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