Areas of intensive agriculture and irrigation are prone
to groundwater
nitrate contamination, which can threaten drinking water supplies.
Irrigation center pivots are a common feature in heavily irrigated
regions and have the potential to provide insight into subsurface
redox chemistry. In this study, we hypothesized that the same geochemical
condition(s) that causes rust staining on center pivot systems will
strongly influence groundwater nitrate concentrations. In south central
Nebraska, 700 center pivot irrigation systems were classified by appearance
of iron staining (full rust, part rust, or no rust) using Google Earth
imagery and/or ground-based surveys. Ground-based observation of 270
center pivots yielded the same classifications as Google Earth imagery
83% of the time. Groundwater nitrate concentrations correlated with
pivot classifications show lower nitrate concentrations in full rust
and part rust pivots when compared with no rust pivots. The novelty
of this work is to provide a framework for understanding groundwater
quality using an inexpensive method applicable to both established
and developing agricultural communities