Groundwater Availability
 

Alluvium (Qa)
Topography
Alluvium forms terraces and floodplains along the Green and Barren Rivers and tributaries.

Hydrology
Yield as much as 100 gallons per minute may be obtained from sands and gravel along the Green River. Most wells in thin alluvium furnish less than 100 gallons per day (gallons per day), inadequate for a domestic supply. Course sand and gravel may occur in the alluvium where rocks of Pennsylvanian are close to streams. Water is hard.

Carbondale Formation (Pc)
Topography
The Carbondale forms dissected uplands and ridgetops. Resistant sandstone beds form cliffs as much as 50 feet high.

Hydrology
This formation yields enough water for a modern domestic supply to wells penetrating sandstone; practically no water to wells penetrating only shale. Water is hard or very hard.

Tradewater Formation (Pt)
Topography
The Tradewater underlies dissected uplands and ridgetops. Resistant sandstone beds form cliffs.

Hydrology
This formation generally yields only small quantities of water to wells. It may yield enough water for a modern domestic supply to wells penetrating a sufficient thickness of sandstone. Water is fresh near outcrops areas but becomes increasingly mineralized with depth. Some wells in the Aberdeen Sandstone produce over 20 gallons per minute.

Caseyville Formation (Pca)
Topography
The Caseyville underlies rolling uplands. It forms dissected uplands and ridgetops near Green River.

Hydrology
Yields of 60 gallons per minute have been obtained from thick sandstone beds. The formation will yield enough water for a modern domestic supply to most wells penetrating sandstone. At depth, the water becomes salty or may have a high sodium bicarbonate content. Electric logs indicate that moderately mineralized water may be obtained locally from this formation at depths of 1,200 feet.

Buffalo Wallow Formation, Leitchfield Formation, Tar Springs Sandstone (Mcu)
Topography
Forms gently rolling uplands and fairly steep slopes adjacent to stream valleys. Sandstone lenses, some massive, form small benches.

Hydrology
These formations yield little or no water.

Glen Dean Limestone, Hardinsburg Sandstone (Mcl)
Topography
These rock bodies underly gently rolling to level uplands. Uplands are dissected along perimeter of Dripping Springs escarpment. Limestone forms steep slopes above benches of the underlying sandstone. Sandstone forms small discontinuous benches on hillsides.

Hydrology
Most wells in upland areas are inadequate for domestic supply, yielding little or no water.

Golconda Formation (Haney Limestone, Big Clifty Sandstone, Beech Creek Limestone
Members) (Mcl)

Topography
Limestone underlies gently rolling to flat uplands, and forms bluffs near heads of valleys. Big Clifty sandstone caps major escarpment (Dripping Springs Escarpment) several hundred feet high, and underlies gently rolling uplands.

Hydrology
Deep wells that penetrate the sandstone formations near perennial stream level may produce enough for a domestic supply (more than 500 gallons per day). Close to outcrop areas, particularly near major escarpments, yields from perched water bodies generally are low and not dependable. Minor spring horizons occur on discontinuous layers of shale near the base of the sandstones. The most conspicuous springs are those that discharge from the base of the Big Clifty sandstone. These are the “dripping springs” of the Dripping Springs escarpment. Many of these springs go dry during the late fall and summer, and very few are adequate for a domestic supply. Limestone formations yield small to adequate supplies from solution openings. In lowland areas bordering streams, some wells produce enough for a domestic supply. Many springs occur at the base of the limestones where they crop out on escarpments and hillsides.

Girkin Formation (Reelsville Limestone, Sample Sandstone, Beaver Bend and Paoli Limestone) (Mcl)
Topography
The Girkin forms the lower part of the Dripping Springs Escarpment. The lower part of formation underlies rolling karst areas near base of escarpment. The formation contains numerous large sinks into which the overlying sandstone has collapsed.

Hydrology
Most wells in upland areas are inadequate for domestic use, however some wells yield enough water for a domestic supply (more than 500 gallons per day) from solution openings. Some wells produce more than 5 gallons per minute from large solution openings. Near outcrop areas, particularly near major escarpments, yields generally are inadequate during dry periods.

The U.S. Geological Survey's Hydrologic Atlas Series, published cooperatively with the Kentucky Geological Survey, provides hydrologic information for the entire state.

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