Open-File Report 2007–1069

Prepared in cooperation with the Wyoming State Engineer's Office

Selected Hydrogeologic Data for the High Plains Aquifer in Southwestern Laramie County, Wyoming, 1931–2006

Open-File Report 2007–1069

By Laura L. Hallberg and Jon P. Mason

Aerial photo of southwestern Laramie County.

Aerial view of Happy Valley Ranchette development, southwestern Laramie County.
Photograph by Jon P. Mason.
(Click on image for a larger version, 237 kb)


Contents

Abstract

Introduction

Hydrogeologic Data

References Cited

Appendix 1. List of wells and test holes and types of information available

Appendix 2. Annotated bibliography of publications used as sources of data subsequent to Ogle and Jordan (1997)

Appendix 3. Aquifer test results (Microsoft Excel file)

Figures

1. Map showing location of study area, southwestern Laramie County, Wyoming

2-3. Diagrams showing:

2. Federal township-range system for locating wells and test holes

3. Sample well record

Any use of trade, product, or firm names in this report is for descriptive purposes only and does not imply endorsement by the U.S. Government.

Conversion Factors
Multiply
By
To obtain
Length
inch (in.)
2.54
centimeter (cm)
foot (ft)
0.3048
meter (m)
mile (mi)
1.609
kilometer (km)
Area
square mile (mi2)
2.590
square kilometer (km2)
Volume
gallon (gal)
3.785
liter (L)
gallon (gal)
0.003785
cubic meter (m3)
gallon (gal)
0.1337
cubic foot (ft3)
Flow rate
gallon per minute (gal/min)
0.06309
liter per second (L/s)
gallon per minute (gal/min)
0.00223
cubic feet per second (cfs)
Specific capacity
gallon per minute per foot [(gal/min)/ft]
0.2070
liter per second per meter [(L/s)/m]
Hydraulic conductivity
foot per day (ft/d)
0.3048
meter per day (m/d)
Transmissivity*
foot squared per day (ft2/d)
0.09290
meter squared per day (m2/d)
foot squared per day (ft2/d)
7.481
gallons per day per foot (gpd/ft)

Vertical coordinate information is referenced to the National Geodetic Vertical Datum of 1929 (NGVD 29).

Horizontal coordinate information is referenced to the North American Datum of 1983 (NAD 83).

Elevation, as used in this report, refers to distance above the vertical datum.

*Transmissivity: The hydraulic conductivity of an aquifer times the aquifer thickness. The standard unit for transmissivity is cubic foot per day per square foot times foot of aquifer thickness [(ft3/d)/ft2]ft. In this report, the mathematically reduced form, foot squared per day (ft2/d), is used for convenience.


Abstract

The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the Wyoming State Engineer’s Office, created a hydrogeologic database for southwestern Laramie County, Wyoming. The database contains records from 166 wells and test holes drilled during 1931–2006. Several types of information, including well construction; well or test hole locations; lithologic logs; gamma, neutron, spontaneous-potential, and single-point resistivity logs; water levels; and transmissivities and storativities estimated from aquifer tests, are available in the database. Most wells and test holes in the database have records containing information about construction, location, and lithology; 77 wells and test holes have geophysical logs; 70 wells have tabulated water-level data; and 60 wells have records of aquifer-test results.

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Introduction

The High Plains aquifer in Laramie County, Wyoming, is an important ground-water resource for agriculture, municipal, industrial, and domestic uses. Currently (2006), Laramie County is experiencing substantial population growth. From 1950 to 2000, the population of Laramie County increased from 47,662 to 81,607 (U.S. Census Bureau, 2006). As population increased, ground-water demand increased. The number of registered ground–water withdrawal wells in Laramie County with a priority date earlier than 1951 is about 1,400, whereas the number with a priority date before 2001 is more than 8,000 (Wyoming State Engineer’s Office, 2006). Water withdrawn from the High Plains aquifer in southwestern Laramie County is of particular interest to water-resource managers because the area contains the municipal well fields for the city of Cheyenne and is experiencing rapid growth in both urban and rural population.

Many hydrogeologic investigations have been conducted in this area to characterize the physical and hydraulic properties of the High Plains aquifer (Ogle and Jordan, 1997). Results of these investigations were published in more than 50 reports. Most of these reports are not available in a digital format, and only limited paper copies often are available. In addition to published reports, unpublished sources of physical and hydraulic information are available [for example, ground-water well-inventory files from the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and water-well permits from the Wyoming State Engineer’s Office (WSEO)]. To help make physical and hydraulic information from these sources more readily available, the USGS, in cooperation with the WSEO, compiled this information into an electronic database. Wells and test holes with information in the database are listed in Appendix 1.

The purpose of this report is to describe the hydrogeologic data for southwestern Laramie County contained in the database developed by the USGS in cooperation with the WSEO. The database contains records from 166 wells and test holes located within a 382-mi2 area of southwestern Laramie County (fig. 1). Many of the reports listed in Ogle and Jordan (1997) were used as record sources for the database. Additional sources used for the database that are not included in Ogle and Jordan (1997) are listed in Appendix 2. Inclusion of records in the database does not imply USGS endorsement of the accuracy or content of the records. In cases when multiple record sources were available for a well, record discrepancies sometimes existed between sources. In those cases, an assessment of the record sources was conducted to determine which source was likely to be most accurate. In most cases, discrepancies between record sources were minor (for example, a 5-ft difference in reported well depth).

Map of study area showing well locations.

Figure 1. Location of study area, southwestern Laramie County, Wyoming.

Well and test-hole location data came from several sources, including WSEO well permits, USGS ground-water well-inventory files, and the Cheyenne Board of Public Utilities. Well and test-hole locations are presented using the Federal township-range system of land subdivision. For example, a well with the location of SE NW sec 26 T14N R68W would be located in the southeast quarter of the northwest quarter of section 26 in Township 14 North, Range 68 West (fig. 2).

Diagram of well-numbering system.

Figure 2. Federal township-range system for locating wells and test holes.

The types of records contained in the database include well location, well construction, lithologic logs, geophysical logs, and aquifer-test results. Most wells and test holes in the database have records for construction, location, and lithology. Additionally, 77 wells or test holes have geophysical logs, and 60 wells have records of aquifer-test results. Appendix 1 lists all wells and test holes and gives a description of the types of information available in the database for each.

Diagrams of well construction and lithologic logs were created using the software package LogPlot 2003. The information used to construct the diagrams primarily came from WSEO well permits and consultant reports. About 80 wells and test holes in the database have detailed lithologic records acquired from consultant reports; lithologic records from the rest of the wells mainly came from WSEO well permits and typically contained less detailed descriptions than those acquired from consultant reports.

Geophysical logs also are available for 77 wells and test holes in the database. The types of geophysical logs in the database include gamma, neutron, spontaneous-potential, and single-point resistivity. Most of the geophysical logs in the database were digitized from scanned copies. Inputting the logs into LogPlot 2003 allowed individual log scales to be manipulated so that scales could be normalized for most logs. Some geophysical logs in the database were inserted as scanned images, and scales were not normalized.

Water-level records are available for 70 wells in the database. Water-level records available for wells range from a single water-level value to daily water-level values recorded by an electronic data logger. In addition to the tabulated water-level records available, many wells and test holes contain water-level information in their construction diagrams.

Aquifer-test results are available from published reports for 60 wells in the database. All 60 wells have records containing at least one transmissivity estimate calculated from aquifer tests. In addition, some wells have one or more reported storativities. Readers should note that available information regarding aquifer-test length indicates that the drawdown part of the test typically was conducted for 1 day to a few days. Estimated storativities generally indicated confined conditions. Because these aquifer tests were relatively short in duration, storativities could be small because the aquifer is confined or because the length of test was not long enough to encounter delayed yield in cases where unconfined conditions exist. A summary of available aquifer test results is presented in Appendix 3.

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Hydrogeologic Data

The database containing the hydrogeologic data is served in HyperText Markup Language (HTML) and can be opened using an Internet browser. Records for each well or test hole can be accessed using the mouse to click on the well or test-hole name below the location map (fig. 1). In addition, clicking on a section in the location map will send the user to a table using the same format as Appendix 1 with a listing of wells and test holes located within the section. The types of data available for each well and test hole are indicated using the same codes used and described in Appendix 1. In the tables, each well and test hole has records available in JPEG and LogPlot formats. Records in JPEG format can be opened and viewed using an Internet browser. Records in LogPlot format must be downloaded to the user's computer and viewed using LogView 2003, which is free viewing software provided by RockWorks. The LogPlot format provides a higher quality image for viewing and printing than the JPEG format. Wells with available water-level records have hotlinks in the water-level column and/or the daily-values column of Appendix 1. In some cases, this is a link to water levels stored in the database described in this report. In other cases, this link is to the USGS National Water Information System (NWIS)Web, which is a separate USGS database available online that contains water levels for some of the wells described in this database. An active Internet connection is required for this link. Water levels are presented in feet below land surface. The format used for well and test-hole records displayed using JPEG and LogPlot files is shown in figure 3. The record header contains the following information:

Well name – Name of well used in WSEO well permit.

USGS well number – Fifteen-digit station identification number used in USGS NWIS database.

Well permit number – WSEO well permit number.

Location – Well location given in the Federal township-range system of land subdivision.

Elevation – Elevation of land surface at well location, in feet above National Geodetic Vertical Datum of 1929.

Transmissivity – The hydraulic conductivity of an aquifer times the aquifer thickness. The standard unit for transmissivity is cubic foot per day per square foot times foot of aquifer thickness [(ft3/d)/ft2]ft. In this report, the mathematically reduced form, foot squared per day (ft2/d), is used for convenience.

Storativity - The volume of water an aquifer releases from storage per unit surface area of the aquifer per unit change in hydraulic head (dimensionless). Storativity is the same as storage coefficient.

Depth drilled – Depth from land surface to the bottom of the original borehole, in feet. May be greater than well depth if borehole is backfilled.

Well depth – Depth from land surface to bottom of well, in feet.

Completion date – Date well construction was completed.

Not all well and test-hole records contain complete header information. Diagrams showing well or test-hole construction and the lithology that was described from the borehole or drill cuttings are shown below the record header on the left side. If available, selected geophysical logs are shown to the right of the lithology diagram (fig. 3).

Well record.

Figure 3. Sample well record.

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References Cited

Ogle, K.M., and Jordan, B.J., 1997, Annotated bibliography of selected publications, through 1996, Cheyenne municipal well-field areas, Cheyenne, Wyoming: U.S. Geological Survey Open–File Report 97–228, 33 p. Online at http://pubs.er.usgs.gov/publication/ofr97228

U.S. Census Bureau, 2006, Wyoming QuickFacts: digital data accessed May 4, 2006, at http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/states/56/56021.html and http://www.census.gov/population/cencounts/wy190090.txt

Wyoming State Engineer’s Office, 2006, Water Rights Database: digital data accessed June 23, 2006, at http://seo.state.wy.us/wrdb/index.aspx

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Appendix 2. Annotated bibliography of publications used as sources of data subsequent to Ogle and Jordan (1997).

Black and Veatch, 2004, The 2003 water and wastewater master plans: report prepared for the city of Cheyenne, 3 books, 10 volumes, variable pagination.

Location: Cheyenne Water and Sewer Department.


Hatton Water Consultants, 1993, Summary report on drilling, testing and completion well no. 24: Wheat Ridge, Colorado, report prepared for Coastal Chem, Inc., 13 p. (including unnumbered pages), 1 plate.

Location: Records of the Wyoming State Engineer’s Office.


Hatton Water Consultants, 1993, Summary report on drilling, testing and completion well no. 25: Wheat Ridge, Colorado, report prepared for Coastal Chem, Inc., 12 p. (including unnumbered pages), 1 plate.

Location: Records of the Wyoming State Engineer’s Office.


JR Engineering, 2002, Summary report on drilling, testing, and completion wells 27 and 28: Greenwood Village, Colorado, report prepared for Coastal Chem, Inc., 23 p. (including unnumbered pages), geophysical logs.

Location: Records of the Wyoming State Engineer’s Office.


JR Engineering, 2005, Cheyenne Belvoir Ranch level II study: Greenwood Village, Colorado, report prepared for the Wyoming Water Development Commission, variable pagination, 10 plates.

Location: Wyoming Water Development Commission.


Weston Engineering, Inc., 1998, Cheyenne three well rehabilitation project report: Laramie and Upton, Wyoming, report prepared for the city of Cheyenne, variable pagination.

Location: Cheyenne Water and Sewer Department.


Weston Engineering, Inc., 1999, Cheyenne water well rehabilitation and exploration project report: Laramie and Upton, Wyoming, report prepared for the city of Cheyenne, variable pagination.

Location: Cheyenne Water and Sewer Department.


Weston Engineering, Inc., 1999, Cheyenne fiscal year 1999 well rehabilitation project final report: Laramie and Upton, Wyoming, report prepared for the city of Cheyenne, variable pagination.

Location: Cheyenne Water and Sewer Department.


Weston Engineering, Inc., 2000, Project report Cheyenne fiscal year 2000 well rehabilitation project: Laramie and Upton, Wyoming, report prepared for the city of Cheyenne, variable pagination.

Location: Cheyenne Water and Sewer Department.


Willard Owens Associates, Inc., 1981, Completion report for well no. 22: Denver, Colorado, report prepared for Wycon Chemical Company, 20 p. (including unnumbered pages), 1 plate.

Location: Records of the Wyoming State Engineer’s Office.


Willard Owens Consultants, Inc., 1987, Report of test drilling and completion of Wycon well no. 23: Denver, Colorado, report prepared for Wycon Chemical Company, 18 p. (including unnumbered pages), geophysical logs.

Location: Records of the Wyoming State Engineer’s Office.


Willard Owens Consultants, Inc., 1990, Summary report on test hole drilling and water supply development: Denver, Colorado, report prepared for Coastal Chem, Inc., 11 p. (including unnumbered pages), geophysical logs.

Location: Records of the Wyoming State Engineer’s Office.


Willard Owens Consultants, Inc., 1990, Summary report on production well drilling, testing and completion well No. 8A: Denver, Colorado, report prepared for Coastal Chem, Inc., 13 p. (including unnumbered pages), 1 plate.

Location: Records of the Wyoming State Engineer’s Office.


Willard Owens Consultants, Inc., 1990, Summary report on production well drilling, testing and completion well No. 16A: Denver, Colorado, report prepared for Coastal Chem, Inc., 13 p. (including unnumbered pages), 1 plate.

Location: Records of the Wyoming State Engineer’s Office.


Willard Owens Consultants, Inc., 1991, Summary report on drilling, testing and completion well no. 26: Denver, Colorado, report prepared for Coastal Chem, Inc., 12 p. (including unnumbered pages), 1 plate.

Location: Records of the Wyoming State Engineer’s Office.


 

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