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A study of salt‐water encroachment in the Galveston Area, Texas
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1934
Year
Coastal EngineeringTexas BoardEngineeringHydrogeophysicsSoil SalinityGeochemical RelationsHydrogeologic SystemOutcrop FormationsEarth ScienceLow Salinity Water FloodingGeoenvironmental EngineeringGalveston AreaHydrogeologySalt DomeSubsurface HydrologyGeographyHydrologySediment TransportSedimentologyCoastal SystemsCoastal ManagementWater ResourcesCivil EngineeringLand SubsidenceSurface Water
A survey of the ground‐water resources of the region in which Houston and Galveston are situated was started in December 1930 by the United States Geological Survey in cooperation with the Texas Board of Water Engineers. In connection with this survey a special study is being made of the geochemical relations of the ground‐waters of an area about 25 miles wide and 90 miles long, extending from Galveston northwestward through Houston. This study considers the influence on the ground‐waters of the age and degree of weathering of the outcrop formations, base‐exchange materials, salt‐domes, and salt‐water encroachment. In this paper, however, attention is confined to salt‐water encroachment along the line from Galveston to Houston (Fig. 1).