Arsenic Concentrations High in  Wind Cave Water Bodies
Released: 2/13/2012 12:00:00 PM     Contact  Information:
U.S. Department of the Interior, U.S. Geological  Survey
Office of Communications and Publishing
12201 Sunrise Valley  Dr, MS 119
Reston, VA 20192 _Andrew Long_ (mailto:[email protected])   
(http://www.usgs.gov/newsroom/[email protected]+&n=Andrew+Long) 
Phone:  605-394-3237 

_Marisa Lubeck_ (mailto:[email protected])   
(http://www.usgs.gov/newsroom/[email protected]&n=Marisa+Lubeck) 
Phone:  303-202-4765 

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Note to editors: Photographs from this study are available _online_ 
(http://sd.water.usgs.gov/projects/Wind%20Cave/WindCave.html) . 
High concentrations of naturally occurring arsenic are  present in 
interconnected water bodies within Wind Cave National Park, S.D.,  according to 
a 
new U.S. Geological Survey _report_ (http://pubs.usgs.gov/sir/2011/5235/) .    
 
The USGS study, in cooperation with the National Park Service, revealed 
that  arsenic concentrations in Wind Cave groundwater exceeds 10 micrograms per 
liter,  the Maximum Contaminant Level for drinking-water supplies set by 
the U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency. The high arsenic concentrations are 
likely  naturally occurring and originated from shale layers in overlying  
rocks.  
"The fact that the source of the contamination is from the rock layers  
through which the ground waters naturally flow means that it is not possible to 
 remediate the arsenic in the water," explained USGS Director Marcia 
McNutt.  "This study points out the fact that part of what makes the park a 
geologic  wonder also creates challenges for the water supply."  
The study also found that the water may be flowing among various connected  
cave water bodies within the park. Groundwater in Wind Cave drips from cave 
 ceilings and exists in underground streams, pools, and lakes. As part of 
the  study, a harmless dye was injected into one of the Wind Cave lakes. The 
dye was  subsequently detected in two other cave water bodies within the 
park, traveling  fast at a minimum velocity of nine meters per day.  
"The rate of flow is very fast for groundwater," said Dr. Andrew Long, USGS 
 hydrologist and lead author of the report. "This indicates that 
groundwater in  Wind Cave is connected to a unique aquifer consisting of a 
network of  
underground pipes."  
According to a further groundwater chemistry analysis, the water in Wind 
Cave  is a mixture of local precipitation that has infiltrated the ground and  
groundwater inflow from multiple aquifers.  
For more information, visit the USGS South Dakota Water Science Center 
_website_ (http://sd.water.usgs.gov/) . 
_http://www.usgs.gov/newsroom/article.asp?ID=3100_ 
(http://www.usgs.gov/newsroom/article.asp?ID=3100) 

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