“…Where groundwater ages are deduced from measured concentrations of multiple environmental tracers, they often indicate mixtures of waters of different apparent ages (Bethke & Johnson, 2008;Cornaton & Perrochet, 2006;Ginn, 1999;Suckow, 2013;Varni & Carrera, 1998). Concentrations of environmental tracers that are indicative of relatively young waters (<60 years) and concentrations of tracers indicative of very old water have been found in the same groundwater samples at a wide range of field sites, as seen in Figure 1 (e.g., Alikhani et al, 2016;Arslan et al, 2015;Bretzler et al, 2011;Cook et al, 2005Cook et al, , 2017Corcho Alvarado et al, 2007;Genereux et al, 2009;Harrington, 2002;Jasechko et al, 2017;Jurgens et al, 2014Jurgens et al, , 2016Massoudieh et al, 2014;Samborska et al, 2013;Sültenfuβ et al, 2010;Talma et al, 2000). Cook et al (2005), for example, observed the presence of CFCs, an indicator of water less than 60 years old, in water with 14 C concentrations suggesting ages of thousands of years in a fractured rock aquifer.…”