California Groundwater Ambient Monitoring and Assessment (GAMA) Program Domestic-Supply (Shallow) Aquifer Assessment Study Unit Grid Cells for Assessment of Groundwater Resources
Dates
Publication Date
2020-12-28
Start Date
2012
End Date
2022
Last Revision
2023-01-24
Citation
Watson, E., Johnson, T.D. and Dupuy, D.I., 2020, California Groundwater Ambient Monitoring and Assessment (GAMA) Program Domestic-Supply (Shallow) Aquifer Assessment Study Unit Boundaries and Grid Cells for Assessment of Groundwater Resources (ver. 2.0, January 2023): U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P931PZRC.
Summary
The California Groundwater Ambient Monitoring and Assessment Program (GAMA) is a statewide assessment of groundwater quality designed to help better understand and identify risks to groundwater resources. GAMA is implemented by the California State Water Resources Control Board. The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) is the technical lead for the Priority Basin Project (PBP), one of the components of the GAMA Program. Starting in 2012, GAMA began an assessment of water resources in domestic-supply (shallow) aquifers in California. These aquifers provide water for domestic and small community-supply wells, which are often drilled to shallower depths in the groundwater system than public-supply wells. Domestic-supply aquifers are of interest [...]
Summary
The California Groundwater Ambient Monitoring and Assessment Program (GAMA) is a statewide assessment of groundwater quality designed to help better understand and identify risks to groundwater resources. GAMA is implemented by the California State Water Resources Control Board. The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) is the technical lead for the Priority Basin Project (PBP), one of the components of the GAMA Program. Starting in 2012, GAMA began an assessment of water resources in domestic-supply (shallow) aquifers in California. These aquifers provide water for domestic and small community-supply wells, which are often drilled to shallower depths in the groundwater system than public-supply wells. Domestic-supply aquifers are of interest because shallow groundwater may respond more quickly and be more susceptible to contamination from human activities at the land surface, than the deeper aquifers (USGS, 2018). To prioritize domestic-supply aquifers, California was divided into 938 groundwater units consisting of California Department of Water Resources (DWR) groundwater basins and highland areas outside of the basins defined by California Groundwater Units (Johnson and Belitz, 2014) or Hydrologic Units (HUC8) from the Watershed Boundary Dataset (USGS and USDA, 2013). The groundwater units were prioritized for sampling based on the number and density of households relying on domestic wells, water-use, and well-location information compiled from well-completion reports submitted to the DWR. The groundwater units were grouped into study units designed to facilitate comparison of groundwater quality between the shallow aquifer systems and the deep aquifer systems assessed by GAMA from 2004 to 2012 (Bennett, 2018). Some study units were further subdivided into study areas. The study units (and study areas when applicable) were divided into equal area polygons (cells) so that all cells within a given study unit (or study area) have an equal area. The study unit boundaries can be found in the GAMA_PBP_SAA_Boundaries shapefile included in this Data Release. The purpose of this publication is to collect and assemble all of the study area grid cells into a single GIS dataset. At the time of this publication, a total of 16 study units comprising of 35 study areas have been sampled. These study areas have been divided into a total of 1018 cells, with the number of cells per study area ranging from 10 to 50 (median 25), and the size of the cells ranging from 14 to 175 km2 (median 60 km2). Two of the Monterey Bay and Salinas Valley Domestic-Supply Aquifer study area cells were further subdivided into subcells to get a greater spatial density of data (Goldrath and others, 2016). Additional information about the design of individual study area grids can be found in the reports listed in the Report_Ref attribute descriptions. Grid cells created for the deep aquifer systems study can be found in Johnson and others, 2018. Version Notes: This Data Release supersedes the data release published in 2020 (version 1). This data release was updated to include study units sampled since the initial publication. Also, report references for all version 1 study units have been updated to reflect the most recent publications for each study unit. In addition, study unit names were updated to be listed as the full name instead of the study unit abbreviations used in version 1. Minor revisions were also made to the metadata text. The version 1 data release may be obtained by contacting the dataset Point of Contact.
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Shapefile:
GAMA_PBP_SAA_GridCells.zip
GAMA_PBP_SAA_GridCells.shp.xml Original FGDC Metadata
View
43.55 KB
GAMA_PBP_SAA_GridCells.CPG
5 Bytes
GAMA_PBP_SAA_GridCells.dbf
333.32 KB
GAMA_PBP_SAA_GridCells.prj
445 Bytes
GAMA_PBP_SAA_GridCells.sbn
10.48 KB
GAMA_PBP_SAA_GridCells.sbx
660 Bytes
GAMA_PBP_SAA_GridCells.shp
11.55 MB
GAMA_PBP_SAA_GridCells.shx
8.05 KB
Purpose
This digital data set was created as part of the study design for a statewide, comprehensive groundwater monitoring and assessment program (Belitz and others, 2003; Belitz and others, 2015; California State Water Resources Control Board, 2003). This data set contains grid cells of domestic-supply (shallow) aquifers that are spatially distributed across study areas, providing a basis for equal area sampling of selected groundwater basins. Additional grid cells sampled as part of the GAMA program will be added to this data set when sampling for new study units is completed.
Revision 2.0 by Elise Watson on January 24, 2023. To review the changes that were made, see “GAMA_PBP_SAA_DR_VersionHistory.docx” in the attached files section on the main landing page.