Assessing California Groundwater
Susceptibility Using
Trace Concentrations of Halogenated Volatile Organic Compounds
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Abstract
Twenty-four halogenated volatile organic compounds (hVOCs)
and
SF<sub>6</sub> were measured in groundwater samples collected from
312 wells across California at concentrations as low as 10<sup>–12</sup> grams per kilogram groundwater. The hVOCs detected are predominately
anthropogenic (i.e., “ahVOCs”) and as such their distribution
delineates where groundwaters are impacted and susceptible to human
activity. ahVOC detections were broadly consistent with air-saturated
water concentrations in equilibrium with a combination of industrial-era
global and regional hVOC atmospheric abundances. However, detection
of ahVOCs in nearly all of the samples collected, including ancient
groundwaters, suggests the presence of a sampling or analytical artifact
that confounds interpretation of the very-low concentration ahVOC
data. To increase our confidence in ahVOC detections we establish
screening levels based on ahVOC concentrations in deep wells drawing
ancient groundwater in Owens Valley. Concentrations of ahVOCs below
the Owens Valley screening levels account for a large number of the
detections in prenuclear groundwater across California without significant
loss of ahVOC detections in shallow, recently recharged groundwaters.
Over 80% of the groundwaters in this study contain at least one ahVOC
after screening, indicating that the footprint of human industry is
nearly ubiquitous and that most California groundwaters are vulnerable
to contamination from land-surface activities