QUANTIFICATION AND ISOLATION OF THE BAROMETRIC INFLUENCE ON GROUND-WATER LEVELS IN THE PENNSYLVANIAN INGLEFIELD SANDSTONE, SOUTHWESTERN INDIANA
Continuous water level and barometric pressure measurements permitted the quantification, isolation, and removal of barometric responses from piezometer hydrographs. After removal of the barometric influence, additional, smaller scale sinusoidal fluctuations in water levels are observed that may represent Earth tide responses. Further analyses are required to interpret these fluctuations.
The rapid and constant barometric response functions in these piezometers are diagnostic of a confined system, suggesting that the Inglefield Sandstone is a confined aquifer in this area. Whereas the micritic West Franklin Limestone forms a basal confining layer, stratigraphic observations do not indicate the presence of an obvious upper confining layer. Heterogeneity within the Inglefield Sandstone, in particular a fine-grained facies with oriented mica grains likely serves as an upper confining layer.