Water Resources Bulletin


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Guide to Louisiana's Ground-water Resources


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Ground water is one of the most valuable and abundant natural resources of Louisiana. Of the 4.4 million people who live in the State, 61 percent use ground water as a source for drinking water. Most industrial and rural users and half of the irrigation users in the State rely on ground water. Quantity, however, is not the only aspect that makes ground water so valuable; quality also is important for its use. In most areas, little or no water treatment is required for drinking water and industrial purposes.




Interim Report on Ground-water Conditions Between Baton Rouge and New Orleans, Louisiana


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This report summarizes data collected during the initial phase of the study of ground-water conditions along the Mississippi River between Baton Rouge and New Orleans. Only the area from just below Baton Rouge to Norco in St. Charles Parish is covered by this interim report; a reconnaissance report, Geological Survey Circular 374 (Eddards and others, 956) provides some information for the remainder of the project area. The final report will define the potential yield and quality of water in aquifers in the entire project area.







Geohydrology and Development of Ground Water at Fort Polk, Louisiana


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An investigation of the geohydrologic characteristics of the Williamson Creek and Carnahan Bayou aquifers, their development, and the effects of pumpage on water levels in those aquifers was conducted at Fort Polk, Louisiana, from 1985 to 1987. Confining units hydrologically separate these aquifers from each other and from overlying and underlying aquifers. Predevelopment ground-water flow patterns followed the dip of the geohydrologic units, from areas of recharge northwest of Fort Polk, to areas of discharge to the southeast. Cones of depression at Fort Polk and at a paper mill near De Ridder in Beauregard Parish, 15 miles southwest of Fort Polk, have modified the flow pattern in the Williamson Creek aquifer. Cones of depression around Fort Polk and Leesville, Louisiana, 6 miles northwest of North Fort Polk, and around the Kisatchie well field in Rapides Parish, 31 miles east of North Fort Polk, have modified the flow pattern in the Carnahan Bayou aquifer.







Water Resources Pamphlet


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