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Groundwater Mounding and Minnesota ISTS Rules

Groundwater Mounding and Minnesota ISTS Rules. MPCA 2/21/06. What is GW mounding?. Subp. 4. Groundwater mound . “Groundwater mound”, means the rise in height of the seasonally saturated soil or regional water table caused by the addition of sewage effluent from a SSTS into the soil.

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Groundwater Mounding and Minnesota ISTS Rules

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  1. Groundwater Mounding and Minnesota ISTS Rules MPCA 2/21/06

  2. What is GW mounding? • Subp. 4. Groundwater mound. “Groundwater mound”, means the rise in height of the seasonally saturated soil or regional water table caused by the addition of sewage effluent from a SSTS into the soil.

  3. What is GW mounding? • Simply, the rise in the groundwater when water is added by man.

  4. What is GW mounding?

  5. What is GW mounding?

  6. Much More Water • Natural recharge to the groundwater ranges from 3 to 11 inches per year. • The actual bottom loading to a SSTS (no inflated flow values) ranges from 6 to 30 feet per year.

  7. So What is the Problem? • Reduce the unsaturated zone for pathogen removal

  8. Impede oxygen transfer needed to breakdown the biomat So What is the Problem? oxygen

  9. So What is the Problem? • Breakout in downslope areas

  10. So What is the Problem? • Reduced transmissivity?

  11. Mounding and ISTS • Mounding accounted for 7080 “cookbook” designs. • Three-foot separation distance required on all soil textures – balance between treatment and mounding.

  12. Mounding and ISTS Sandy Soil Heavy Soil High surface area Low surface area

  13. History • Agency recognized mounding concerns since 1984 (HRSA document). • With the greatly increased number of LSTS and MSTS, new concerns have been raised.

  14. Concerns • What is the relationship between linear loading rate and mounding?

  15. Linear Loading Rate

  16. Concerns • Are GW mounding models appropriate for seasonally saturated soil layers with slow permeability?

  17. Model Applicability Regional Aquifer Permeable Materials

  18. Model Applicability Seasonally Saturated Soil Slowly Permeable Materials

  19. Concerns • Have the models proved accurate in the past? • When should, and to what detail should a mounding analysis be conducted.

  20. Concerns • What type and what frequency of field measurements should be used? • What operational monitoring should be undertaken.

  21. Rules – MSTS (Chapter 7081) • Preliminary groundwater evaluation must be conducted for all MSTS • Evaluation = the size of the system, proposed loading rate, and system geometry must be determined • from the best available information: • determine the general geology, shallow groundwater setting, regional groundwater setting, hydraulic conductivities

  22. Rules – MSTS (Chapter 7081) • The designer must consult with the local unit of government to determine whether the local unit of government will require a field or further groundwater investigation and, if so, the extent of the investigation.

  23. Rules – MSTS (Chapter 7081) • The designer must consult with the local unit of government to determine if the local unit of government will require monitoring and, if so, the extent of the monitoring.

  24. Rules – MSTS (Chapter 7081) • An approximation of the rise in groundwater from system operation must be determined • A narrative evaluation of the accuracy of the approximation must be provided.

  25. SDS Permit - LSTS • The direction of groundwater flow • The depth to the static groundwater level • The rate of groundwater movement (hydraulic conductivity)

  26. SDS Permit - LSTS • The hydraulic gradient • The specific yield • To provide geologic cross-sectional analysis of the site including the presence of deeper limiting layers, perched water tables, bedrock, karst, etc.

  27. SDS Permit - LSTS • To characterize aquifers that may be impacted

  28. SDS Permit - LSTS • The items involve hydrogeologic field work operations. • This field work involves the drilling of deep borings at the proposed site • The borings are used to test for the direction of groundwater flow, the static water level, the hydraulic conductivity, the hydraulic gradient, and the specific yield.

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