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Datasets for assessing the impact of drought on arsenic exposure from private domestic wells in the conterminous United States

Dates

Publication Date
Time Period
2020

Citation

Lombard, M.A., 2021, Datasets for assessing the impact of drought on arsenic exposure from private domestic wells in the conterminous United States: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P9TU0R2T.

Summary

Documented in this data release are data used to model and map the probability of arsenic being greater than 10 micrograms per liter in private domestic wells throughout the conterminous United States during drought conditions (Lombard and others, 2020). The model used to predict the probability of arsenic exceeding 10 micrograms per liter in private domestic wells was previously developed and documented by Ayotte and others (2017). Independent variables in the model include groundwater recharge and annual precipitation. In order to assess the impact of drought these variables were altered to simulate drought by reducing the 30-year average annual values by 25 and 50 percent. The impact of drought was also assessed by using groundwater [...]

Contacts

Point of Contact :
Melissa A Lombard
Originator :
Melissa A Lombard
Metadata Contact :
Melissa A Lombard
Distributor :
U.S. Geological Survey - ScienceBase
SDC Data Owner :
New England Water Science Center
USGS Mission Area :
Water Resources

Attached Files

Click on title to download individual files attached to this item.


“Prediction_Output_Data.zip”
1.26 GB application/zip
Change_Prob_Maps.zip
“Change_Prob_Maps.zip”
932.03 MB application/zip
predictor_sources.csv
“predictor_sources.csv”
3.17 KB text/csv
Prediction_Input_Data.zip
“Prediction_Input_Data.zip”
490.14 MB application/zip
predictor_definitions.csv
“predictor_definitions.csv”
6.02 KB text/csv

Purpose

These datasets were assembled in order to use an existing statistical model (Ayotte and others, 2017) to assess the impact of drought on the probability of arsenic being greater than 10 micrograms per liter in private domestic wells throughout the conterminous United States. The maps that were produced can be used to assess and monitor areas that are vulnerable to increases in the likelihood of elevated arsenic in private domestic wells during drought.

Map

Spatial Services

ScienceBase WMS

Communities

  • USGS Data Release Products
  • USGS New England Water Science Center

Tags

Provenance

Additional Information

Identifiers

Type Scheme Key
DOI https://www.sciencebase.gov/vocab/category/item/identifier doi:10.5066/P9TU0R2T

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