Specific conductance and water type as a proxy model for salinity and total dissolved solids measurements in the Upper Colorado River Basin

Applied Geochemistry
By: , and 

Links

Abstract

Salinity levels in streams and tributaries of the Colorado River Basin have been a major concern for the United States and Mexico for over 50 years as the water is used by millions of people for domestic and industrial purposes. Recently, the United States Geological Survey expanded stream monitoring networks including the number of sites where continuous (15-min) specific conductance is measured in the Colorado River Headwaters and Gunnison River Basin located east of the Colorado-Utah state line (hereafter, UCOL). The purpose of this study is to apply a proxy method to determine salinity and total dissolved solids concentrations from specific conductance and major-ion water type that is applicable to monitoring sites in the UCOL. Within the UCOL, carbonate rich waters originate from high-elevation mountain regions in the eastern UCOL, calcium sulfate rich waters are mainly found in the western half of the UCOL including the Gunnison River Basin, and waters of variable composition are found along the lower reaches of the Colorado River and Eagle River. It was found that the chemistry of sites with variable composition changes seasonally and is impacted by both geogenic and anthropogenic processes, potentially including seasonal application of deicing road salt. The specific conductance – water type proxy can be used to reliably (±10 %) predict salinity and total dissolved solids at 66 monitoring sites in the UCOL. The method is rapid, can generate high-resolution measurements, is cost-effective, and greatly expands the utility of specific conductance measurements. Furthermore, the high-resolution estimates provide an accurate approach to determining long-term salinity loads as short-term events are accurately accounted for.

Study Area

Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title Specific conductance and water type as a proxy model for salinity and total dissolved solids measurements in the Upper Colorado River Basin
Series title Applied Geochemistry
DOI 10.1016/j.apgeochem.2025.106358
Volume 184
Year Published 2025
Language English
Publisher Elsevier
Contributing office(s) WMA - Laboratory & Analytical Services Division
Description 106358, 11 p.
Country United States
State Colorado
Other Geospatial Upper Colorado River Basin
Additional publication details