Dakota Home Introduction Subsurface Hydrology Geologic Framework Petrophysics Water Quality
Dakota Aquifer Program--Subsurface Hydrology
A User's Guide to Well-spacing Requirements for the Dakota Aquifer in Kansas--continued

Characteristics of the Dakota Aquifer

The Dakota aquifer underlies most of the western two-thirds of Kansas (figure 1). The geologic units that collectively form the Dakota aquifer belong to the Dakota Formation, the Kiowa Formation, and the Cheyenne Sandstone (figure 2). Not all of these units are present throughout the aquifer's extent. The combined thickness of these units may be more than 700 feet (210 m) in west-central parts of the state. Not all of the units that constitute the Dakota aquifer contain aquifer-grade material (usually sandstone) that can yield water to wells. The amount of sandstone in the Dakota aquifer varies from less than 70 feet (21m) to more than 350 feet (107m) of the total thickness. Variations in thickness can change over very short lateral distances. Statewide, the average amount of sandstone is about one-third of the entire thickness. The sandstones occur as irregular, discontinuous bodies within relatively impervious (incapable of transmitting fluids) shaly strata and generally occur in several, more or less distinct zones within the geologic units (figure 2).

Figure 1--The Dakota aquifer in Kansas.

Figure 2--Geologic units of the Dakota aquifer.

These irregular sandstone bodies were deposited during the early part of the Cretaceous Period of geologic history (approximately 90-100 million years ago) in river valleys and along ancient shorelines. Seas eventually covered most of what is now Kansas and the exposed land surfaces laid to the east. The river-deposited sandstone bodies occur in the lower two-thirds of the Dakota Formation and the Cheyenne Sandstone. They are ribbonlike in shape (figure 3A) and are up to 20 miles (32 km) in length, 1.5 miles (2.4 km) wide, and can be over 100 feet (30 m) thick. With some exceptions, these sandstone bodies are oriented in an east-west direction, parallel to the drainage direction. The shoreline sandstone bodies occur in the upper Dakota Formation and the Kiowa Formation. They are usually thin and sheetlike (figure 3B), typically up to 50 feet (15 m) thick and covering several square miles. The long axes of these sandstone bodies tend to be oriented in a north-south direction, parallel to the orientation of the ancient shorelines. In central Kansas, river-deposited sandstones dominate the upper part of the Dakota aquifer, but in western Kansas near the Kansas-Colorado border, shoreline sandstones are more dominant in the upper part of the aquifer. Both river-deposited and shoreline sandstones occur in the lower part of the Dakota aquifer throughout its extent.

Figure 3--Irregular sandstone bodies. A) river deposited sandstones, B) shoreline sandstones. Arrows represent flow toward the well. Lighter shading represents the volume affected by pumping a single well.


Previous Page--Well spacing intro || Next Page--Freshwater sources
Dakota Home || Start of Report

Kansas Geological Survey, Dakota Aquifer Program
Updated Jan 7, 1997.
Scientific comments to P. Allen Macfarlane
Web comments to webadmin@kgs.ukans.edu
The URL for this page is HTTP://www.kgs.ukans.edu/Dakota/vol1/hydro/spac/pic1_2.htm