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USGS Coastal and Marine Geology Program

Field Activity Details for field activity 2005-035-FA

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Other ID: none

Status: Completed

Organization(s): USGS, Woods Hole Coastal and Marine Science Center

Funding Program(s):

Principal Investigator(s): John Bratton

Affiliate Investigator(s): John Colman, USGS-WRD-MA/RI

Information Specialist(s): John Bratton

Data Type(s): Sampling: Geology, Sampling: Chemistry, Location-Elevation: Navigation, Environmental Data: Conductivity, Environmental Data: Dissolved Oxygen, Environmental Data: ORP, Environmental Data: Temperature, Environmental Data: pH, Geochemical: Surveys (geochemical), Electro-Magnetic: Resistivity, Environmental Data: Sediment Properties

Scientific Purpose/Goals: Drilling from barge using ATV-mounted rig (supplied by USGS-WRD-Northborough, MA) to collect groundwater samples from beneath Salt Pond, Salt Pond Bay, and connecting channel.

Vehicle(s):

Start Port/Location: Salt Pond, Eastham, MA

End Port/Location: Salt Pond, Eastham, MA

Start Date: 2005-08-22

End Date: 2005-08-26

Equipment Used: Geoprobe-resistivity, Hydraulic drill, GPS (wh), YSI multiparameter sonde, Submersible pumps

Information to be Derived:

Summary of Activity and Data Gathered: Article for Soundwaves by John Bratton, September 9, 2005: Drilling for Submarine Ground Water in Old Cape Cod. In order to test some hypotheses about groundwater flow under and into an estuary at Cape Cod National Seashore, and to constrain results of previous modeling efforts, an interdisciplinary USGS science team conducted a drilling operation in late August (22-26). National Park Service managers are concerned about nutrients that are entering the estuary via submarine groundwater discharge that are leading to eutrophication and harmful algal blooms. The team used a USGS ATV-mounted drilling rig secured to a barge (Fig. 1) to advance an electrical resistivity probe or collect submarine groundwater samples at seven sites in Salt Pond, Salt Pond Channel, and Salt Pond Bay (Fig. 2). Results are consistent with surface electrical resistivity data collected in 2004. Sampling and geophysical measurements indicate that Salt Pond, a kettle pond that has been breached by rising sea level, is underlain by brackish ground water in sediments to a depth of about 45 feet below the sediment surface. The channel connecting the pond to the bay has nearly fresh water at shallow depths (10 feet below sediment surface or less). Most surprisingly, Salt Pond Bay is underlain by a layer of fresh ground water over 50 feet thick as far offshore as measured (about 1300 ft). Groundwater sampling was conducted by John Bratton, John Crusius, and Dirk Koopmans (USGS-GD-Woods Hole). Andy Massey (USGS-WRD-MA/RI) operated the drill rig and Tim McCobb (USGS-WRD-MA/RI) operated the resistivity probe. Contractors Mark Avakian and Len Perry (TG&B, Inc.) operated the barge and secured anchors and spuds. Divers Michael Casso and Sandy Baldwin (USGS-GD-Woods Hole) helped remove drill pipe left in the pond after drilling was complete (Fig. 3). John Colman and Denis LeBlanc (USGS-WRD-MA/RI) provided helpful input during the design and implementation stages of the field effort. The work was supported by the Coastal and Marine Geology Program, and the MA-RI Water Science Center. Captions: Fig. 1 Andy Massey (USGS-WRD-MA/RI) operates a drilling barge that is temporarily stranded during low tide on a mudflat at Cape Cod National Seashore. Fig. 2 Approximate drilling locations in Salt Pond, Salt Pond Channel, and Cape Cod Bay. Fig. 3 Divers Michael Casso and Sandy Baldwin (USGS-GD-Woods Hole) prepare to enter Salt Pond to remove submerged drill pipe near the center of the pond.

Staff: Sandy Baldwin, John Bratton, Michael Casso, John Crusius, Dirk Koopmans

Affiliate Staff:
Andy Massey
USGS-WRD
drill rig operator; Tim McCobb
USGS-WRD
Geoprobe resistivity probe; Nancy Finley and John Portnoy
NPS contacts; Mark Avakian and Len Perry
barge contractors

Notes: Original Center People field contained: John Bratton, chief scientist; John Crusius, project scientist; Dirk Koopmans, technician, mobilization, laboratory analysis; Michael Casso and Sandy Baldwin, diving to cut off one drilling pipe.
Project = Coastal Ground-Water Systems, Coastal Ground-Water Systems

Location:

Salt Pond, Salt Pond Channel, Salt Pond Bay, Cape Cod National Seashore, Massachusetts, United States, North America, North Atlantic;

Boundaries
North: 41.8379 South: 41.8288 West: -69.975 East: -69.9631

Platform(s):


TG&B Barge

Publications

Bratton, J.F., 2010, The three scales of submarine groundwater flow and discharge across passive continental margins: The Journal of Geology, v. 118 no. 5, doi: 10.1086/655114.

Cross, V.A., Bratton, J.F., Crusius, J., Colman, J.A., and McCobb, T.D., 2008, Submarine hydrogeological data from Cape Cod National Seashore: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 2006-1169, DVD, https://doi.org/10.3133/ofr20061169.

Portals/Viewers

Documents associated with this activity

Title Survey Equipment Description
Cruise log (document not focused on specific equipment) Chief Scientist's daily narrative with platform, personnel, data acquisition and equipment notes, and sample locations and descriptions.

Data Acquired

Survey EquipmentSurvey InfoData Type(s)Data Collected
Geoprobe-resistivity --- Sediment Properties
Hydraulic drill --- Geology
GPS (wh) --- Navigation
YSI multiparameter sonde --- Conductivity
Dissolved Oxygen
ORP
pH
Temperature
Submersible pumps --- Surveys (geochemical)

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