What Public Wells Reveal About America’s Groundwater
Takeaway: The water pumped from a public well carries the memory of the rocks it moved through, so natural geology can matter as much as nearby pollution.
Groundwater is the quiet backup system under many American towns and cities: it fills public wells, supports growth, and often looks clean long before anyone tests what is dissolved inside it. This episode follows a nationwide USGS assessment that sampled major aquifers used for public supply and found an important twist: many of the most common drinking-water concerns in untreated groundwater come from rocks and sediments themselves, not only from farms, factories, or cities.
We unpack how researchers sampled 25 principal aquifers across the continental United States, why they tested for hundreds of regulated and unregulated constituents, and what it means when a contaminant is found in source water rather than at the tap. Along the way, we translate terms like “geogenic,” “prevalence,” and “human health benchmark” into everyday language, and we look at why arsenic, manganese, strontium, radium, nitrate, and other constituents show up differently depending on geology, water age, chemistry, and land use.
The practical message is not panic; public water systems often treat or blend water before it reaches homes. But the paper shows why knowing the aquifer matters, why unregulated naturally occurring constituents deserve attention, and why a well is never just a pipe in the ground - it is a sampling point in a long underground story.
Citation: Belitz, K.; Fram, M. S.; Lindsey, B. D.; Stackelberg, P. E.; Bexfield, L. M.; Johnson, T. D.; Jurgens, B. C.; Kingsbury, J. A.; McMahon, P. B.; Dubrovsky, N. M. Quality of Groundwater Used for Public Supply in the Continental United States: A Comprehensive Assessment. ACS ES&T Water 2022, 2, 2645-2656. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsestwater.2c00390.
Disclosure: This Waterlines episode package is written for public-science audio production and uses AI-generated voices.