Abstract. Specific capacity data obtained from well construction reports can provide useful estimates of hydraulic conductivity (K). A simple computer program has been developed which can correct specific capacity data for partial penetration and well loss and, using an iterative technique, provide rapid estimates of K at hundreds of data points. The program allows easy data handling and is easily linked with existing statistical programs or contour mapping routines. The method was tested at two field sites in Wisconsin, one underlain by a sandy outwash aquifer, the other by fractured dolomite. In both areas, estimates of K from corrected specific capacity data agree reasonably well with data from pumping tests.
The goal of this study was to provide a preliminary assessment of the occurrence and movement of the pesticide aldicarb in ground water in the Central Sand Plain of Wisconsin. Aldicarb concentrations in ground water beneath three main study fields and two subsidiary fields were monitored during the period December 1980–August 1981. A total of 67 well points, some nested, and one multilevel sampler were installed for this study. In addition, 25 private wells and seven irrigation wells were sampled.
The data collected to date are limited both in space and time. However, several trends are evident: (1) highest concentrations of aldicarb were detected in shallow monitoring wells (those located immediately below the water table); (2) no aldicarb was detected in any of the deep monitoring wells (those located roughly 60 feet below the water table), although aldicarb was found in some of the irrigation wells finished at approximately the same depth; (3) aldicarb seems to be concentrated in roughly a 5‐foot layer near the water table, and (4) marked seasonal fluctuations in aldicarb concentrations occurred in several wells.
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