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HYDROGEOLOGY OF AQUITARDS AND LOW-PERMEABILITY MATERIALS, PART 1:
Analyzing Aquitard Integrity for Water Resources Protection and Contaminated Sites

Aquitards include low-permeability materials such as clays, shales, siltstones, and many other lithologies. These “tight” formations can be among the most important components of groundwater flow systems, but are often poorly characterized and poorly understood.

This webinar is the first of a two-part series on aquitards. Although both webinars are designed to complement each other they can also be viewed independently.

This 90-minute webinar will explore the key roles of aquitards in almost all groundwater projects, from water supply to waste disposal to site remediation. The instructors will discuss the definitions, basic categories, and typical hydrogeologic properties of aquitards, and will introduce the concept of evaluating aquitard integrity. The webinar will demonstrate the effects of aquitards on groundwater flow and well response and show how typical monitoring well configurations can yield useless or misleading information in low-permeability settings.

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Apply webinar topics to any low-permeability setting

This webinar examines groundwater flow rates in low-permeability systems and show how fractures, macropores or other heterogeneities can control flow. All materials presented will be geared to practical application in the field with the goal of improving hydrogeologic characterization.

Topics:
  • Why study aquitards? The importance of aquitards in all groundwater projects.
  • Definitions and basic categories of aquitards
  • Typical hydrogeologic properties of aquitards
  • Hydrostratigraphic relationships
  • Occurrence and effects of fractures in aquitards
  • Function of aquitards in groundwater flow systems
  • Role of aquitards in groundwater protection
  • Definitions of aquitard integrity
  • Keys to aquitard evaluation
  • Understanding hydraulic head measurement in an aquitard context
  • Construction and interpretation of hydraulic head profiles
  • Defining the water table in low-permeability settings
  • How aquitards control groundwater flow systems

Attendees are invited to actively participate during this live and interactive on-line web seminar. Discussion is planned following the webinar for those who want to continue the session. Bring your questions to the webinar and present them to the instructor and other participants for exploring the best solution.


Fee: 249.00 USD Per Computer Site (unlimited participants per site)
when you register for both parts of the two-part series*.

299.00 USD Per Computer Site (unlimited participants per site).
Instructors: Ken Bradbury, Ph.D., PG Program Leader and Hydrogeologist and David Hart, Ph.D., PG, Hydrogeologist

Pay one site registration fee and an unlimited number of participants from your organization can attend at that site.

Attendees receive complimentary access copies to these two publications:

  • Contaminant Transport Through Aquitards:
    Technical Guidance for Aquitard Assessment
    and
  • Contaminant Transport Through Aquitards:
    A State of the Science Review

Cherry, J.A., B.L. Parker, K.R. Bradbury, T.T. Eaton, M.B. Gotkowitz, D.J. Hart, and M.A. Borchardt. 2006. Contaminant Transport Through Aquitards: A State-of-the-Science Review. . Published by American Water Works Association (AWWA) Research Foundation, and International Water Well Association (IWA) Publishing.

Bradbury, K,R, M.B. Gotkowitz, D.J. Hart, T.T. Eaton, J.A. Cherry, P,L. Parker, and M.A. Borchardt. 2006. Contaminant Transport Through Aquitards: Technical Guidance for Aquitard Assessment. Published by American Water Works Association (AWWA) Research Foundation, and International Water Well Association (IWA) Publishing.

Earn 1.5 Professional Development Hours (1.5 PDH) for this webinar.



A Record of Attendance Form is included free with each webinar for your record keeping and individual PDH verification. We ask your on-site coordinator to return the completed and signed copy of the Form to us following the webinar for (1) maintaining a separate copy as a service to attendees and (2) forwarding to NIU confirming attendance for those who order certificates.

Attendees may also order an official a Course Completion Certificate from Northern Illinois University for a small administrative fee. The Certificate is optional and may be ordered separately following the webinar to confirm your attendance and showcase the certificate on your office wall. Instructions for ordering certificates are given during the webinar.


* This webinar is eligible for the ’BUY THREE, GET THREE’ discount; however the two-part webinar series discount shown above cannot be combined with it.

Instructor Bios
Kenneth Bradbury, PhD, PG

Dr. Kenneth Bradbury is Wisconsin's State Geologist and Director of the Wisconsin Geological and Natural History Survey, UW-Madison Division of Extension. Ken is a hydrogeologist who has worked and published on groundwater issues in Wisconsin since 1982, with a focus on applied problems. His research has included investigations of virus transport in groundwater, groundwater flow in fractured rocks, aquitard hydrogeology, groundwater recharge processes, wellhead protection, regional groundwater simulation, and the hydrogeology of glacial deposits.

He received his B.A. from Ohio Wesleyan University, where he majored in geology, then earned a Master's degree from Indiana University. He received his PhD from the UW-Madison Department of Geology in 1982.

Ken is an affiliate faculty member in the UW-Madison Department of Geoscience and the Nelson Institute at UW-Madison. He is a Fellow in the Geological Society of America and is active in the Association of American State Geologists. Ken has served on the Water Science and Technology Board of the National Academy of Sciences and on committees advising the US Geological Survey.

Dave Hart PhD, PG

Dave Hart PhD is a hydrogeologist/geophysicist with the Wisconsin Geological and Natural History Survey and an associate professor at the University of Wisconsin–Extension.

Dave’s applied research includes regional groundwater flow and recharge in southeastern Wisconsin, near-surface geophysics, and measurement of porosities and permeabilities in aquifers and aquitards. Prior to joining the university, he served as a hydrogeologist with Eder Associates. He is an associate editor for Ground Water and past president of the AWRA – Wisconsin Section.



Questions? Email us at service@midwestgeo.com or call 763.607.0092

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