“…20A), where the Upper Floridan aquifer is extensively confined and ground-water flow is quite sluggish. Because of the slow movement of ground water in the area, it is thought that residual seawater that entered the aquifer during the Pleistocene when sea level was higher than its current level has not been completely flushed out by modern freshwater (Sprinkle, 1989;Johnston and Bush, 1988;Reese, 1994Reese, , 2000Reese and Memberg, 2000). The anomalously high concentrations of chloride along the St. Johns River and the eastern coast of Florida are thought to be the result, in varying amounts, of two processes (Sprinkle, 1989): (1) incomplete flushing by the modern-day freshwater flow system of residual seawater that invaded the aquifer during high sea-level stands…”