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Red River of the North Basin

National Water-Quality Assessment Program


Strobel, M.L., and Gerla, P.J., 1992, Effects of Saline Ground-Water Discharge on Water Quality in the Red River of the North, Northeastern North Dakota: Preliminary Observations of the Hydrologic Setting: North Dakota Water Quality Symposium Proceedings, 1992, Bismarck, N. D., p. 60-82.


Abstract

Water quality of the Red River of the North is important for several North Dakota cities that depend on the river as a water resource and for United States-Canadian management of the river. Surface water at low flow has a large dissolved-solids concentration derived from widespread ground-water discharge from bedrock units that subcrop beneath Pleistocene sediments in the central part of the Red River of the North valley. Streamflow increases as rivers cross saline soils and wetlands in the west-central part of the valley. Dissolved-solids concentrations also increase in this area. Ground water discharged from bedrock is a sodium-chloride-type water and mixes with calcium-magnesium-sulfate-type water derived from recharge through tills near the western margin of the valley. The tills are relatively permeable and provide recharge to lacustrine sediments at lower elevations. Artesian discharge in areas of clay-rich lacustrine sediments probably contributes minor quantities of base flow directly to streams; most contributions to surface water occur through zones of more permeable lacustrine sediments in wetland areas.

Introduction

Water quality of the Red River of the North and its tributaries (fig.1) is affected by natural and manmade sources of chemical constituents, including saline soils in the Red River of the North drainage basin, municipal and industrial waste, and agricultural chemicals. The water quality of the Red River of the North is of concern because the river is an international stream covered under the 1909 Boundary Waters Treaty between Canada and the United States and is the sole source of water for many communities. Therefore, understanding the processes that affect the water quality of the Red River of the North is vital for evaluating present water conditions and guiding any future water-quality management actions.

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effects of upwards migration of ground water from bedrock sources through surficial Pleistocene sediments on water quality of the Red River of the north. This paper presents a description of the variations in ground-water and surface-water chemistry and hydrogeologic characteristics of the Pleistocene sediments.


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