Document Details

Regional water table (1994) and water-level changes in the Morongo Basin, San Bernardino County, California

Carolyn R. Trayler, Kathryn M. Koczot | July 1st, 1995


The Morongo Basin is in the Mojave Desert region of southern California, about 100 mi east of Los Angeles. Ground water is virtually the sole source of water in the Morongo Basin. Increased pumping to meet the needs of an increasing resident population has resulted in ground-water overdraft in parts of the ground-water basin. Most of the water resources of the basin are managed by the Mojave Water Agency (MWA) and the U.S. Marine Corps Air/Ground Combat Center at Twentynine Palms (USMCAGCC).

To help manage the ground-water resources, the MWA and the U.S. Marine Corps, Department of the Navy, requested the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) to construct a regional water-table map of the Morongo ground-water basin. The purposes of this study were to construct a regional water-table map and determine areas of water-level change in the

Morongo Basin. Existing data were evaluated and water levels were measured in selected wells throughout the Morongo Basin. Water-level measurements were used to construct a regional water-table map for 1994 conditions (fig. 1), and available historical water levels were used to construct hydrographs (shown in fig. 1) and determine water-level change at selected wells.

Results of this study will aid the USGS in evaluating its current ground-water monitoring network in the Morongo Basin. In addition, information gained through this study will contribute to ongoing projects in the area, such as the Regional Aquifer-System Analysis (RASA) of Southern California.

Keywords

Groundwater Exchange, groundwater pumping impacts, monitoring