Geohydrologic Characterization of Southern Sonoma Valley to Support
Water Management, Sonoma County, California
Abstract
The U.S. Geological Survey and Sonoma County Water Agency (SCWA) are
engaged in a cooperative project to characterize the hydrogeology of
southern Sonoma Valley, a groundwater basin in the northern California
Coast Ranges where groundwater represents about 60% of the valley’s
water supply. The basin lies near the Sonoma volcanic field and major
transverse faults of the San Francisco Bay region, resulting in a
complex aquifer system comprising volcanic and sedimentary rocks and
unconsolidated sediments that are cut by faults and overlain to the
south by recent Bay Muds of San Francisco Bay. Geologic sections were
constructed using geologic maps and lithologic data from over 1,500
water wells compiled by SCWA to describe the subsurface geologic
configuration relative to groundwater pumping wells. This work suggests
an aquifer system extending to about 900 feet below land surface (ft
bls), consisting of upper and lower aquifer units separated by an
intermediate unit with lower hydraulic conductivity, overlying and
partly interfingering with a complex suite of volcanic rocks. SCWA
constructed a four-layer hydrostratigraphic model of the basin using
spatial trends in the lithologic data. The hydrostratigraphic layers
defined by SCWA include multiple mapped geologic formations because of
heterogeneity and complex interfingering between stratigraphic units.
Water from selected wells was analyzed for specific conductance, major
and minor ions, nutrients, stable isotopes, carbon isotopes, and
tritium. Well data were categorized by completed perforation interval
into shallow wells (< 200 ft bls), mid-depth wells (200–500
ft bls), and deep wells (> 500 ft bls). Shallow wells
typically have water types related to recent mountain-front recharge,
and, near the tidal marshlands north of San Pablo Bay, have high
chloride and total dissolved solid concentrations associated with modern
saline-water intrusion. Mid-depth and deep wells have water with poor
water-quality, likely influenced by connate water from consolidated
marine sediments, or a mixture of water from consolidated sediments and
thermal water. This cooperative basin characterization of subsurface
geology, hydrostratigraphy, and water chemistry will enable SCWA to make
strategic water management decisions in Sonoma Valley.