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Kansas Geological Survey, Open-file Report 2019-19
Part of the Ogallala-High Plains Aquifer Project


High Plains Aquifer Index Well Program: 2018 Annual Report

by J. J. Butler, Jr., D. O. Whittemore, E. Reboulet, S. Knobbe, B. B. Wilson, and G. C. Bohling

KGS Open-file Report 2019-19
June 2019

Perecent change in aquifer thickness, predevelipment to average 2017-2019, Kansas High Plains Aquifer.

Executive Summary

The index well program is directed at developing improved approaches for measuring and interpreting hydrologic responses at the local scale (section to township) in the High Plains aquifer (HPA) in western and south-central Kansas. The program is supported by the Kansas Water Office (KWO) with Water Plan funding as a result of KWO's interest in and responsibility for long-term planning of groundwater resources in western and south-central Kansas. The Kansas Department of Agriculture, Division of Water Resources (DWR), provides assistance, as do Groundwater Management Districts (GMDs) 1, 3, 4, and 5 and the Kansas State University Northwest Research-Extension Center (KSU-NWREC).

The project began with the installation of three monitoring ("index") wells in western Kansas in late summer 2007. Each well has a transducer for continuous monitoring of water levels that is connected to telemetry equipment to allow real-time viewing of well conditions on a publicly accessible website. Since late 2012, wells have been continuously added to the network. The index well network now consists of 15 wells with telemetry equipment and real-time data access from the KGS website and 8 wells without telemetry equipment (water-level data downloaded approximately quarterly and displayed on the KGS website). The vision of the index well program is that these wells, and other wells that will be added to the network over time, will be monitored for the long term. Shorter-term monitoring will be done at additional wells (expansion wells); seven expansion wells are monitored in GMD1. A major focus of the program is to use these data for the development of criteria or methods to evaluate the effectiveness of management strategies at the local scale in the HPA in western and south-central Kansas. These data are also used to develop a better understanding of the major mechanisms affecting water levels in the Kansas HPA. This improved understanding is then incorporated into the groundwater models of the aquifer.

This report provides a concise description of conditions as of late winter to early spring of 2019. The majority of the report consists of an update and interpretation of the hydrographs for all of the index wells and the GMD1 expansion wells. In addition, a discussion of the relationships among precipitation (as characterized by radar data), annual water-level changes, and nearby water use at the three original index wells and three additional wells, and the implications of those relationships for efforts to moderate water- level declines by pumping reductions are presented.

The major findings of the index well program to date are as follows:

  1. Water-level data collected using a pressure transducer and data logger provide a near-continuous record of great practical value that can help in the assessment of the continued viability of the HPA as a source of water for large-scale irrigation.
  2. Interpretation of index well hydrographs enables important insights to be drawn concerning hydrogeologic conditions, the major mechanisms affecting water levels, and the long-term viability of the aquifer in the vicinity of the index wells. For example, there is no indication of episodic recharge at any of the index wells in the western Kansas HPA.
  3. The annual water-level measurement network data, in conjunction with reliable water-use data, can be used to evaluate the impact of management decisions on the township and larger scale using a new approach developed from water-level responses collected as part of this program.
  4. The standardized precipitation index and radar precipitation data are good indicators of the climatic conditions that drive pumping in the High Plains aquifer in Kansas.

In addition to the concise description in this report, these findings are discussed in previous program reports, a recent KGS publication (Whittemore et al., 2018), and scientific journal articles resulting from program work (Butler et al., 2013; Whittemore et al., 2016; Butler, Whittemore, Wilson, and Bohling, 2016, 2018).

The focus of activities in 2019 will be on the continuation of monitoring at all program wells; continued analysis of hydrographs from all wells; installation of equipment for real-time monitoring at four existing wells in GMD2; exploring the possibility of adding additional wells to the network; and further assessment of the relationships among radar precipitation data, annual water-level change, and water use.


The complete text of this report is available as an Adobe Acrobat PDF file.

Read the PDF version (16.2 MB)


Kansas Geological Survey, Geohydrology
Placed online July 12, 2019
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