
Groundwater is easy to forget because it is out of sight, but millions of people depend on it every day. This episode follows a statewide California effort to answer a deceptively simple question: when a well test finds a problem, how do we describe the size of that problem fairly? Is it the number of wells, the amount of aquifer area affected, or the number of people who rely on that water? We unpack how USGS scientists used data from about 11,000 public-supply wells across 87 study areas to build two clearer yardsticks: affected area and equivalent-population. Along the way, we talk about arsenic, uranium, manganese, nitrate, solvents, farm chemicals, urban history, and why groundwater quality is not the same everywhere, even inside one state. The study found that roughly one-fifth of California groundwater used for public supply had high concentrations of at least one constituent, with trace elements more widespread than nitrate or organic compounds at statewide scales. We also look at what this does and does not mean for tap water, since utilities may blend or treat water before delivery. Citation: Belitz, K.; Fram, M. S.; Johnson, T. D. “Metrics for Assessing the Quality of Groundwater Used for Public Supply, CA, USA: Equivalent-Population and Area.” Environmental Science & Technology 2015, 49, 8330–8338. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.5b00265. Disclosure: this Waterlines episode package is written for production with AI-generated voices.
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Who Gets Tap Water from Underground? Mapping America’s Public-Supply Groundwater

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The Water Cycle Picture Is Missing Us

What Salt Can Tell Us About a Well: Reading Groundwater in Southern Quebec
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