EPA 910/9-87-167 United States Region 10 Environmental Protection 1200 Sixth Avenue Agency Seattle WA August 1987 Office of Ground Water <&EPA Resource Document For Consideration of the North Florence Dunal Aquifer as a Sole Source Aquifer ------- RESOURCE DOCUMENT FOR CONSIDERATION OF THE NORTH FLORENCE OUNAL AQUIFER AS A SOLE SOURCE AQUIFER Prepared by the Office of Ground Water U.S. EPA Region 10 Seattle, Washington 98101 August 1987 ------- RESOURCE DOCUMENT FOR CONSIDERATION OF THE NORTH FLORENCE DUNAL AQUIFER AS A SOLE SOURCE AQUIFER Sole Source Aquifer Program The Safe Drinking Water Act, Public Law 93—523, was signed into law on December 16, 1974.1 This act provided the statutory basis for designation of sole source aquifers by the Environmental Protection Agency. Section 1424(e) of the Act states: "If the Administrator determines, on his own initiative or upon petition, that an area has an aquifer which is the sole or principal drinking water source for the area and which, if contaminated, would create a si-gnificant hazard to public health, he shall publish notice of that determination in the Federal Reqister. After the publication of any such notice, no commitment for Federal financial assistance (through a grant, contract, loan guarantee, or otherwise) may be entered into for any project which the Administrator determines may contaminate such aquifer through a recharge zone so as to create a significant hazard to public health, but a commitment for Federal assistance may, if authorized under another provision of law, be entered into to plan or design the project to assure that it will not so contaminate the aquifer." Petition On June 2, 1985, the Region 10 Office of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) received a petition from Shirlee J. Gardinier, a citizen of Florence, Oregon, requesting that EPA designate the North Florence Dunal Aquifer as a sole source aquifer.2 The petitioner provided EPA with additional technical information on July 30, 1985. A Federal Register notice announcing receipt of the petition and requesting public comment was published on November 13, 1985.3 Another Federal Register notice, published on March 3, 1986, announced the publication of a support document and requested further public comments through August 1, 1986.4 An additional public commertt period is now open to provide an opportunity to review recently revised boundaries of the proposed sole source aquifer area. ------- 2 Purpose This document represents a summary of available information which will serve to provide the basis for an EPA decision regarding sole source aquifer designation. Those interested in more detailed information may consult the references listed at the end of the report. GENERAL DESCRIPTION OF THE NORTH FLORENCE DUNAL AREA Location The North Florence Dunal Aquifer represents a hydrologically isolated portion of an extensive dunal aquifer system located along the south-central Oregon coastline. The entire dunal aquifer system, whose width ranges from less than one mile to over three miles, extends almost 60 miles from Coos Bay north to Heceta Head. The dunal area north of the Siuslaw River, herein referred to as the North Florence Dunal Aquifer, includes nearly 20 percent of the total dunal aquifer system area. The area originally petitioned for sole source aquifer status included only the unconsolidated sand deposits between the Siuslaw River and Sutton Creek. However, available information suggests that the sand dune area north of Sutton Creek is not hydrologically separate from the rest of the aquifer. Also, part of the bedrock surface east of the dunes supplies runoff into lakes which are hydrologically connected to the aquifer. Therefore, it seems appropriate to include these areas into the proposed sole source aquifer area. A more thorough description of the boundaries associated with the aquifer occurs later in this report, as does a map (Attachment 1) which delineates those boundaries. Climate A temperate marine climate with distinct wet and dry seasons prevails in the area. Temperature records from Reedsport, located 20 miles south of Florence, show an average annual temperature of 52 degrees (Farenheit). The July-August temperature averages 61 degrees whereas the January temperature averages 45 degrees.5 Rainfall at Florence averages 65 inches per year with about 80% occurring between the months of October and March. 5, o Population Over 8,000 people reside in the North Florence Dunal Area, including about 4,500 within the city limits of Florence.6>7 Since tourism forms the principal industry of the area, summertime population figures must be considerably higher. According to the Lane County planning staff, about 15,000 people will reside in the area by the year 2,000 and, ultimately, the population may approach 25,000.6 ------- 3 Geology BEDROCK UNITS The wind-blown sand of the dunal aquifer rests upon a wave-cut terrace of sedimentary and igneous bedrock. Sandstone and siltstone beds, whose grains are cemented by clay minerals and calcite, crop out along most of the eastern boundary of the aquifer.5.8 These beds were exclusively correlated with the middle Eocene Tyee Formation until 1974. Since then, some investigators have grouped the strata with the Flournoy Formation while others hold to the original correlation.9,10 The upper Eocene Yachats Basalt crops out along the northeastern margin of the aquifer for about one mile. This complex assemblage of volcaniclastic rocks and ancient lava flows erodes less easily than the sedimentary bedrock as evidenced by the rocky headland of Yachats Basalt north of the dunal aquifer.8 Springs and wells in the bedrock units yield only very small amounts of water.5 UNCONSOLIDATED MATERIAL Surface expressions of the sand cover have been categorized into three groups: active dunes, stabilized dunes, and deflation plains.8 Active dunes are those areas with little or no vegetation covering them which move freely in response to the wind. Stabilized dunes, as the name implies, represent those areas covered by enough vegetation to hold the sand in place. Recently stabilized dunes contain a cover of grasses and shrubs whereas forests cover dunes which were stabilized decades ago. Deflation plains are areas eroded by wind (deflated) down to the summer water table elevation. These marshy wind-scoured depressions generally expand during the winter and spring as the water table rises. Active dunes observed presently encroaching upon forested areas illustrate the dynamic nature of the sand-covered land surface. Surface cuts and boreholes, which show multiple buried soil horizons and peat beds, indicate a history of continual sand movement. Numerous borehole records combined with a seismic survey by Oregon State University have allowed fairly detailed characterization of the aquifer portion between Sutton Creek and the Siuslaw River. Key findings from subsurface investigations include: (1) unconsolidated sand thicknesses average 100-200 feet; (2) since the sand lies upon a flat bedrock surface, topographic highs in the dunes correspond to thicker accumulations of wind-blown sand; (3) abrupt thinning occurs not only along the eastern and northern aquifer margin, as would be expected, but also around a buried sea stack located under the coastal highway northwest of Clear Lake; (4) the lower one-third of the sand is largely impermeable because of plastic clay between the sand grains.5J 1 Desposition by wind has produced a sand body of quite uniform grain size and fairly uniform grain composition. According to sieve analysis of samples taken just north of Florence, 96-99 percent of the grains are of medium- and fine-grained sand size.5 Mineralogical studies along the Oregon coast have shown that dune sands contain 70-99 percent quartz with the higher amounts of quartz generally found furthest from the ocean.12 Chemically ------- 4 unstable rock, fragments account for most of the balance.13 jhe uniformly sand-sized particles, when saturated, can hold and transmit large quantities of water. Hydrology A favorable combination of geologic and climactic factors make the dunal aquifer an immense dynamic reservoir of ground water. Laboratory studies suggest that mobile ground water accounts for 32 to 35 percent of the aquifer volume.5. Measured permeabilities range from 270 to 600 gallons per day per square foot.5 From a water development standpoint, the thick accumulation of porous and permeable sand will yield in excess of 150 gallons per minute to properly constructed wells.5 Natural recharge and discharge in 1963, when the area was less urbanized, was estimated at 3000 acre feet per year for each square mile of the aquifer.5 Although ground water withdrawals have increased significantly since then, natural discharge still greatly exceeds consumption. Approximately 85 percent of the rain which falls upon the sand-covered surface percolates into the water table.5 Locally, discontinuous buried soil layers and peat beds, both partly cemented by iron oxides, act to retard veritical movement.5.6 However, on a large scale, ground water moves rapidly and almost uniformly towards a discharge point. In fact, tritium age dating indicates that water in the aquifer replaces itself at least every 30 years.6 The North Florence Dunal Aquifer discharges principally into the Pacific Ocean and Siuslaw River. Multiple seeps and springs occur along the coastline and riverbank, although areas of quicksand indicate that the aquifer discharges mostly as underflow.5 The water table slopes westward at about 10 feet per 1,000 feet and southward at about 5 feet per 1,000 feet from its highest portion, located west of Mercer, Col lard, and Clear Lakes.11 Munsel Creek intercepts some of the ground water flowing towards the Siuslaw River. Likewise, Sutton Creek and Berry Creek intercept some of the westward moving ground water before it discharges into the Pacific.5'6 The string of lakes along the eastern boundary of the aquifer are a minor discharge area. However, the aquifer supplies a significant amount of water to the lakes, especially during the summer months when surface water inflow decreases and withdrawals from Clear Lake are increased. Hydrographs comparing lake levels with aquifer levels strongly suggest a hydrologic connection between the surface and ground water supplies.5 More refined studies estimate that the aquifer supplies at least 27% of Clear Lake's annual water supply and a much higher proportion during the dry season.14 Few streams cross the dunal area since most rainfall quickly infiltrates to the water table. Those streams which do flow across the area (Munsel Creek, Sutton Creek, and Berry Creek) originate in upland areas of relatively impermeable bedrock. Where streams flow across the sand they are hydrological ly connected with the ground water system. In fact, effluent ground water provides most of the flow of Sutton and Munsel Creeks at their points of discharge.6 ------- 5 Aquifer and Designated Area Boundaries The North Florence Dunal Aquifer encompasses the entire continuous body of sand located north of the Siuslaw River and east of the Pacific Ocean. The surface contact between bedrock, and the unconsolidated sand forms the northern and eastern boundary of the designated area as far south as Mercer Lake. The boundary between bedrock and the dunal aquifer has been drawn on the basis of a surface geological map published in 1974 by the Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries.8 In addition to the dunal sand area itself, steep drainage areas east of Col lard, Clear, Ackerley, and Munsel Lakes have been included in the proposed designated area because those lakes are hydrologically connected to the aquifer.5.6 Therefore, the surface drainage divide located just east of the lakes forms the eastern boundary of the area proposed for designation from Mercer Lake south to the Siuslaw River. Ground Water Quality From a human health standpoint, the aquifer provides water of good quality. However, naturally high concentrations of dissolved iron require treating the water for aesthetic reasons. The naturally high dissolved iron content apparently results from weakly acidic ground water (pH of 5.6 to 6.2) reacting with the iron-rich minerals found in some sand grains.6 Potential for Contamination Rapid infiltration rates into the sand cover combined with a shallow water table make the North Florence Dunal Aquifer highly susceptible to contamination from surface activity. Despite the relatively rapid flow of ground water through the aquifer, water soluble contaminants introduced near the surface may remain in the ground water system for nearly 60 years. Immiscible contaminants, such as petroleum distillates, would spread rapidly if spilled onto the permeable sand cover but would resist flushing by natural ground water flow. Possible sources of aquifer contamination include fuel storage tank failure, accidental spills of hazardous material transported across the aquifer, septic tank effluent, storm runoff, pesticides, and chemical fertilizers. The lakes located along the eastern margin of the dunal area would suffer from any contaminants introduced into that portion of the aquifer which recharges the lakes. Direct leaching from septic tanks located in sand-covered areas adjacent to the lakes could seriously downgrade the quality of Clear Lake - the only surface source of drinking water presently used in the area.14 Localized overpumping of the aquifer near the ocean could result in saltwater intrusion. However, population projections by the Lane County Planning Staff suggest that such overdrafts are unlikely. ------- 6 Hater Supply Systems Drinking water for the proposed sole source area comes almost exclusively from two water districts. The City of Florence serves areas within the city limits whereas the Heceta Water Distrist serves residents outside of Florence. Florence produces most of the water it consumes from two city owned and operated wel1s. A treatment plant near the wells precipitates and filters out the iron in addition to providing chlorinationJ5 The city purchases supplemental water from the Heceta Water District during seasonal periods of increased demand. The Heceta Water District pumps water from Clear Lake and distributes it after chlorination. As of 1985, withdrawals from Clear Lake by the water district accounted for about 18% of annual outflow from the lakeJ4 Although the Heceta Water District has only a few hundred connections fewer than Florence, a much higher percentage of its customers are seasonal residents. Accordingly, annual production by the Heceta Water District averages less than half that of the City of Florence. Alternative Sources Locally available surface water cannot qualify as a truly alternative source because of the hydrologic connection between surface water and ground water across the dunal surface. For instance, aquifer recharge to Clear Lake during the summer months, when surface inflow drops sharply and water consumption rises dramatically, already represents a major part of the lake's inflow. Therefore, additional pumping from Clear Lake would, in essence, simply represent additional pumping from the aquifer. Coastal lakes south of the Siuslaw River, such as Woahink Lake, have been suggested as an alternative water source. However, transmission lines and chemical treatment of the poorer quality water would greatly increase consumer costs. Furthermore, the coastal lakes to the south, which are also hydrologically connected to a dunal aquifer, are as vulnerable to contamination as the lakes north of the Siuslaw River. Streams which originate in the bedrock uplands east of the aquifer lack the year-around flow needed to meet water consumption in the area. Original studies of the dunal aquifer at Florence were conducted over 25 years ago because surface streams and wells drilled into bedrock could not meet the growing water needs of the area.5 Any reservoir construction projects designed to provide a steady supply of surface water would face serious obstacles which include: (1) steep topography susceptible to landslides; (2) bedrock units which present engineering difficulties; and (3) silting problems associated with runoff from heavily logged slopes.8 These obstacles alone would raise costs to prohibitive levels. ------- 7 TABLE 1 ANNUAL WATER CONSUMPTION WITHIN THE PROPOSED SOLE SOURCE AQUIFER AREA 1. Ground Water Use City of Florence Individual Wells Total Ground Water Use Volume in Mi 11 ion Cubic ft. 29.3a 0.2d 29.5 Approximate Number of Connections 1600b 30e 1630 Approximate Population Served 4565c 81f 4646 2.*Surface Water Use Heceta Water District City of Florence Total Surface Water Use 11. 5g 2.3J 13.8 1237h 3750i Supplemental Use Only 1237 3750 3. TOTAL (al1 sources) 43.3 2867 8396 4. Surface Water as a Percentage of Total Water Use in the Area: 327. 5. Ground Water as a Percentage of Total Water Use in the Area: 68% * All surface water withdrawals are from Clear Lake. The North Florence Dunal Aquifer is hydrologically connected with Clear Lake and provides about 27% of its annual inflow.14 ------- 8 TABLE 1 NOTES a) Source: The City of Florence estimates that its recently rehabilitated wells presently produce about 600,000 gallons per day, which is equivalent to 29.3 million cubic feet per year. Iron precipitation problems will probably cause production to drop and generate another workover treatment at some point in the future. b) Source: Approximate number of connections according to the City of Florence. c> Source: Oregon Blue Book, 1987-88, published by the Secretary of State. d) Source: Annual consumption was estimated by assuming 30 connections each use 150 gallons per day throughout the year. e) Source: Number of residences estimated by the Heceta Water District as within the proposed sole source aquifer area which are not served by a public water supply system. f) Source: Estimated number of connections was multiplied by 2.7 to arrive at this figure. g) Source: 1985-1986 water production which was used by Heceta Water District customers rather than sold to the city of Florence. h) Source: Connections on record with the Heceta Water District. i) Source: Number of people served was estimated as between 3500 and 4000 by the Heceta Water District. j) Source: The City of Florence used 31.6 million cubic feet during 1985-1986. The difference between that consumption figure and present annual well production capacity of 29.3 million cubic feet equals 2.3 million cubic feet. ------- 9 An aquifer must supply 50 percent or more of the drinking water for an area in order to receive designation as a sole source aquifer. Ground water supplies about 68% of the drinking water in the North Florence area. Furthermore, ground water partly recharges the one source of surface water used as drinking water. No feasible alternative sources to the North Florence Dunal Aquifer system exist in the area. Therefore, contamination of the aquifer would "create a significant hazard to public health."1 ------- 10 REFERENCES 1. Safe Drinking Water Act, Public Law 93-523.42 U.S.C. 300 et. seq. 2. Sole Source Aquifer Petition and related material received by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Seattle, Washington, June 2, 1985 and July 30, 1985. 3. Federal Register, Volume 50, No. 219, November 13, 1985, p. 46828-46829. 4. Federal Register, Volume 51, No. 41, March 3, 1986, p. 7335. 5. Hampton, E.R., 1963, Ground Water in the Coastal Dune Area Near Florence, Oregon: U.S. Geological Survey Water Supply Paper 1539-k. 6. Christensen, R. and Rosenthal, G., 1982, North Florence Dunal Aquifer Study: Lane County and Lane Council of Governments, Eugene, Oregon, 174 P- 7. Roberts, B., 1987, Oregon Blue Book 1987-88, Secretary of State, Salem, Oregon, p. 353. 8. Schlicker, H. G.; Deacon, R. J.; Newcomb, R. C.; and Jackson, R. L., 1974, Environmental Geology of Coastal Lane County: Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries, Bulletin 85, 116 p. 9. Personal communication with E. M. Baldwin, Professor of Geology at the Universi.ty of Oregon, on July 30, 1987. 10. Personal communication with John Beaulieu, State Geologist of Oregon, on July 31, 1987. 11. Couch, R.; Cook, J.; Connard, G.; Troseth, S.; and Standing, W., 1980, Seismic Measurements of the Dunal Aquifer of Florence, Oregon, A Final Report of the Lane Council of Governments: Geophysics Group of the School of Oceanography at Oregon State University. 12. Cooper, W. S., 1958, Coastal Sand Dunes of Oregon and Washington: Geolgical Society of America, Memoir 72, 169 p. 13. Twenhofel, W. H., 1946. Mineralogical and Physical Composition of the Sands of the Oregon Coast from Coos Bay to the Mouth of the Columbia River: Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries, Bulletin 30, 64 p. 14. Christensen, R., 1985, Phosphorus Acumulation in the Clear Lake Watershed: Lane County Land Management Division of the Department of Public Works, 81 p. 15. Kirby, R. A.; Strong, C. H.; Stoner, J. L.; and Chappell, J., 1979, Coastal Domestic Water Supply Study: Lane County Environmental Health Division, 93 p. ------- ATTACHMENT 1 NORTH FLORENCE DUNAL AREA PROPOSED SOLE SOURCE AQUIFER DESIGNATED AREA MAP ------- PAGE NOT AVAILABLE DIGITALLY ------- |