North-Central Section - 47th Annual Meeting (2-3 May 2013)

Paper No. 5
Presentation Time: 2:50 PM

ORIGIN OF HIGH LEVELS OF AMMONIUM IN GROUNDWATER, OTTAWA COUNTY, MI


LINGLE, Derrick, Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, MI 49008 and KEHEW, A.E., Geosciences Department, Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, MI 49008, derrick.a.lingle@wmich.edu

Wells located in and around Hemlock Crossing Park in Ottawa County, MI have elevated levels of ammonium (NH4+) in the groundwater. Ammonium can interfere with drinking water disinfection processes and lead to the eutrophication of surface water bodies. Elevated NH4+ concentrations generally originate from anthropogenic sources. Agricultural activity is common around Hemlock Crossing Park. Manure, spread on fields for fertilizer purposes, could be leaching into the subsurface and providing a source for the NH4+. Another possible source of the NH4+ is from the decay of buried organic matter that was deposited during the ice-free mid-Wisconsin glacial episode.

To determine if organic matter is present in the subsurface below Hemlock Crossing Park, a complete core was recovered during the installation of a monitoring well using Rotasonic drilling. The well boring tagged the Coldwater Shale bedrock, with the intent of acquiring a complete record of glacial sediment in the area. Initial grain size analysis reveals that the local glacial stratigraphy includes sediment from Glacial Lake Chicago, the Saugatuck till, possible Ganges till, and Glenn Shores till. Of interest in the core was a layer of compacted peat. Organic matter in the peat layer was dated at ~41,000 yr before present (B.P.) using radiocarbon analysis. The peat layer is bounded by two sandy confined aquifers; both of which park and residential wells draw water from. Results from water samples collected from park wells confirm that both aquifers have elevated concentrations of Fe2+ and NH4+. This is indicative of a favorable environment for anaerobic microbes, which can break down buried organic material into ammonium.

Future work will involve sampling from park and nearby residential wells and running analysis for major ions and redox parameters. This will give a better understanding of factors that are influencing the water quality. A through isotopic investigation, involving 3H and 14C dating as well as δ18O-δ2H and δ15N-NH4+ signatures, will be used to determine if the elevated NH4+ originates from manure applied to fields or from the decay of the buried peat layer. Results will be beneficial to formerly glaciated regions with similar hydrological conditions where significant amounts of buried organic matter and NH4+ may be present.