Barrington Area Council of Governments

· 118 Applebee Street, Barrington, IL 60010 · Phone: (847) 381-7871 · Fax: (847) 381-7882 · Office Hours: M-Th 9:00 am - 5:00 pm · www.bacog.org

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BACOG WATER RESOURCES INITIATIVE

Reports & Articles



Planning for Sustainability - Mapping the Shallow Groundwater Resource
Kurt O. Thomsen, PhD., P.G.; Janet Agnoletti; and Connie L. Pokorny

This paper was presented at the Environmental Systems Research Institute (ESRI) 2007 International User Conference and published in the conference proceedings.

Over the past decade the public has become more and more concerned with water resources. As a proactive measure, the Barrington Area Council of Governments (BACOG), an association of villages and townships in far northwest suburban Chicago, is currently working on a project to establish water resource baseline conditions in their immediate and surrounding area. Under the direction of BACOG and a professional advisor, a committee of volunteers is conducting much of the work of this water resource initiative using data readily available for little or no cost.

To establish water resource baseline conditions using limited resources, BACOG developed a method to produce baseline hydrogeologic unit maps from readily available borehole log data using GIS querying techniques. Borehole strata descriptions were converted to numerical values by establishing the average hydraulic conductivity of the combined soils making up the stratum of interest. These hydraulic conductivity values were then used to assign each stratum to a hydrogeologic unit based on typical ranges of hydraulic conductivity for aquifers, aquitards and aquicludes. In this manner, the well log data were queried to describe the shallow aquifer system. This approach was used to estimate the health of the shallow aquifer system to plan for sustainability using a water budget model. Estimates were made for the components of the water budget that included: storage, septic loading, inflows including through flow and seepage, discharge, consumption, and outflows including through flow and seepage.

All available stratigraphic data are used to define a given shallow aquifer system and build a representative stratigraphic model. To accomplish this, well log records must be transferred to an electronic database if they are not already available in that format. Most of a project’s objectives will be met by analysis of the resulting model. Innovative mapping techniques are used. These techniques are based on replacing subjective strata descriptions with equivalent average hydraulic conductivity values and the use of statistics to create the model. The report describes the sequential tasks required using this approach.

Report  PDF






Groundwater Resource Planning – Defining the Shallow Aquifer System
Kurt O. Thomsen, PhD., P.G.; Janet Agnoletti; and Connie L. Pokorny

This paper was presented at the Environmental Systems Research Institute (ESRI) International User Conference and published in the conference proceedings. The paper outline the process and methodology developed by the water resources initiative and details the use of Geographical Information Systems (GIS), a computer mapping and data management system, used to define the shallow aquifer system. By defining the shallow aquifer system, BACOG is very close to being able to describe existing groundwater resources, posit the relationship of groundwater to surface waters, project the development and population growth that will occur in the region to build-out, analyze the sustainability of that development by existing groundwater resources, and provide recommendations to governments for protecting sensitive environments and aquifer recharge areas along with public education/conservation programs. The papers focus on the local planning framework for conducting this research and strategies and methodologies for data collection and analysis.

Part 1 - Report PDF
Part 2 - Figures PDF

Illinois State Geological Survey to Begin Mapping the BACOG Area - April 2004

The Barrington Area Council of Governments (BACOG) is pleased to announce the Illinois State Geological Survey (ISGS) will be conducting geological mapping of the Barrington area beginning this summer in support of the groundwater research underway at BACOG. The ISGS will be using the process of natural gamma logging, a type of downhole geophysical logging, to map the geological structure of this region. BACOG will be working with the ISGS through reciprocal data sharing.

Christopher Stohr, Ph.D., Engineering Geologist for the Illinois State Geological Survey (ISGS) gave a presentation on downhole geophysical logging, and addressed the use of Global Positioning Systems (GPS) in the project at the April 27, 2004 BACOG Executive Board Meeting.

Geologic and aquifer mapping is vitally important to the protection of the region's limited shallow groundwater resources. The ISGS will collect information by lowering a sensitive Geiger counter-like device into a well to measure the small amounts of natural radiation of sediments before a pump is installed in a newly-drilled well. The measurements reveal the physical characteristics of the ground below. Natural gamma-ray logs are becoming an important source of geologic data for understanding the regional and local glacial geology and its hydrogeological interpretation.



Dr. Christopher Stohr with some of the equipment used for downhole geophysical logging.
ISWS team measuring a local well for its water resources study.
Measuring Up for the Future - June 26, 2003
The BACOG Water Resources Committee (WRC) is working with the Illinois State Water Survey (ISWS), an agency of the Illinois Department of Natural Resources, on a water resources study. One facet of the project involves mapping the potentiometric surfaces - i.e., water level surfaces - of the shallow aquifers in the BACOG area. Committee members and BACOG staff have been searching for area residents to volunteer their wells for the study. Each well will be opened twice by ISWS hydrogeologists, once this summer and once in the fall, and its water measurement taken. Information obtained from those wells will be shared with the BACOG Water Resources Committee to be included in its study.

The water level measurements will generate important baseline data that has numerous applications for future studies. such as creating aquifer models. Future levels may be compared with the baselines determined from this study. For example, potentiometric surfaces change continuously, and in many cases the only way to demonstrate a change in ground water levels brought about by development pressures, climate change, or other stresses is to compare potentiometric surface maps constructed at different dates. Future water levels may be compared to the baseline developed under this study to identify water usage trends and/or problems.





118 Applebee Street, Barrington IL 60010
Telephone (847) 381-7871 • Facsimile (847) 381-7882
Email BACOG@bacog.org

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