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Karst and the USGS

Welcome to the USGS Karst Website. This website presents information on USGS research on karst aquifers, which are a vital ground-water resource in the United States. Here you can learn about past and current USGS karst research, with information on ongoing studies, real-time data, publications, and key contacts for major karst areas. Click on an aquifer on the map below, or select one from a list of aquifers.

Vendome Well. A flowing artesian well in the Chickasaw National Recreation Area. A water sample from Vendome Well was determined to be 9,000 years old by carbon-14 dating. (Photo by Scott Christenson) Read more about the Arbuckle-Simpson aquifer...
A "blue-hole" spring, Orangeville Rise, Indiana. Sixty feet in diameter. (Photo by Chuck Taylor) Read more about Paleozoic karst aquifers of the Midwest...
Buffalo Spring. Located in Chickasaw National Recreation Area. (Photo by Scott Christenson) Read more about the Arbuckle-Simpson aquifer...
Fluorescent tracer injection into a sinkhole in the Leetown area, WV. Tracer tests were conducted as part of intensive investigations of the hydrogeology, water quality, and ground-water flow of the karst aquifer in the Hopewell Run Watershed, northern Shenandoah Valley, near Leetown, West Virginia. (Photo by Mark Kozar) Read more about karst aquifers of the Valley and Ridge, Piedmont, and Blue Ridge province...
Antelope Spring. Located in Chickasaw National Recreation Area. (Photo by Scott Christenson) Read more about the Arbuckle-Simpson aquifer...

This website has an inventory of karst real-time and water-quality data available from the USGS. You can browse and search for reports and articles authored by USGS researchers, and find links for other karst resources. There is also an overview of karst and its properties.

This website is maintained by members of the USGS Karst Interest Group, whose (KIG), who investigate karst across the United States.

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Page Last Modified: May 7 2009