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Featured researches published by George J. Kraft.


Ground Water | 2007

Agricultural Pollutant Penetration and Steady State in Thick Aquifers

George J. Kraft; Bryant A. Browne; William M. DeVita; David J. Mechenich

The leakage of pollutants from agricultural lands to aquifers has increased greatly, driven by increasing fertilizer and pesticide use. Because this increase is recent, ground water pollutant concentrations, loads, and exports may also be increasing as pollutants penetrate more deeply into aquifers. We established in an aquifer profile a ground water recharge and pollutant leakage chronology in an agricultural landscape where 30 m of till blankets a 57-m thick sandstone aquifer. Pollutant concentrations increased from older ground water (1963) at the aquifer base to younger ground water (1985) at its top, a signal of increasing pollutant leakage. Nitrate-N increased from 0.9 to 13.2 mg/L, implying that leakage increased from 1.9 to 16.5 kg/ha/year. Nitrate load and export could increase from 130% to 230% before reaching a steady state in 20 to 40 years. Chloride increases were similar. Pesticide residues alachlor ethane sulfonic acid (ESA), metolachlor ESA, and atrazine residues partially penetrated the aquifer profile. Their concentration-age-date patterns exhibited an initial increase and then a leveling corresponding to the timing of product adoption and leveling of demand. Unlike NO(3), projecting pesticide residue steady states is complicated by the phasing in and out of pesticide products over time; for example, neither alachlor nor atrazine is currently used in the area, and newer products, which have not had time to transit to the aquifer, have been adopted. The circumstances that resulted in the lack of a pollutant steady state are not rare; thus, the lack of steady states in agricultural region aquifers may not be uncommon.


Journal of Environmental Quality | 2008

Collateral Geochemical Impacts of Agricultural Nitrogen Enrichment from 1963 to 1985: A Southern Wisconsin Ground Water Depth Profile

Bryant A. Browne; George J. Kraft; Juliane M. Bowling; William M. DeVita; David J. Mechenich

In this study, we used chlorofluorocarbon (CFC) age-dating to investigate the geochemistry of N enrichment within a bedrock aquifer depth profile beneath a south central Wisconsin agricultural landscape. Measurement of N(2)O and excess N(2) allowed us to reconstruct the total NO(3)(-) and total nitrogen (TN) leached to ground water and was essential for tracing the separate influences of soil nitrification and ground water denitrification in the collateral geochemical chronology. We identify four geochemical impacts due to a steady ground water N enrichment trajectory (39 +/- 2.2 micromol L(-1) yr(-1), r(2) = 0.96) over two decades (1963-1985) of rapidly escalating N use. First, as a by-product of soil nitrification, N(2)O entered ground water at a stable (r(2) = 0.99) mole ratio of 0.24 +/- 0.007 mole% (N(2)O-N/NO(3)-N). The gathering of excess N(2)O in ground water is a potential concern relative to greenhouse gas emissions and stratospheric ozone depletion after it discharges to surface water. Second, excess N(2) measurements revealed that NO(3)(-) was a prominent, mobile, labile electron acceptor comparable in importance to O(2.) Denitrification transformed 36 +/- 15 mole% (mol mol(-1) x 100) of the total N within the profile to N(2) gas, delaying exceedance of the NO(3)(-) drinking water standard by approximately 6 yr. Third, soil acids produced from nitrification substantially increased the concentrations of major, dolomitic ions (Ca, Mg, HCO(3)(-)) in ground water relative to pre-enrichment conditions. By 1985, concentrations approximately doubled; by 2006, CFC age-date projections suggest concentrations may have tripled. Finally, the nitrification induced mobilization of Ca may have caused a co-release of P from Ca-rich soil surfaces. Dissolved P increased from an approximate background value of 0.02 mg L(-1) in 1963 to 0.07 mg L(-1) in 1985. The CFC age-date projections suggest the concentration could have reached 0.11 mg L(-1) in ground water recharge by 2006. These results highlight an intersection of the N and P cycles potentially important for managing the quality of ground water discharged to surface water.


Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment | 2003

Nitrate impacts on groundwater from irrigated-vegetable systems in a humid north-central US sand plain

George J. Kraft; Will Stites


Journal of Environmental Quality | 2001

Nitrate and chloride loading to groundwater from an irrigated north-central U.S. sand-plain vegetable field

Will Stites; George J. Kraft


Ground Water | 1999

Impacts of Irrigated Vegetable Agriculture on a Humid North‐Central U.S. Sand Plain Aquifer

George J. Kraft; W. Stites; David J. Mechenich


Journal of Environmental Quality | 2000

Groundwater quality beneath irrigated vegetable fields in a North-Central U.S. sand plain

Will Stites; George J. Kraft


Ground Water | 2012

Irrigation Effects in the Northern Lake States: Wisconsin Central Sands Revisited

George J. Kraft; Katherine Clancy; David J. Mechenich; Jessica Haucke


Archive | 2010

Groundwater Pumping Effects on Groundwater Levels, Lake Levels, and Streamflows in the Wisconsin Central Sands

George J. Kraft; David J. Mechanich


Journal of Environmental Quality | 1992

Dependence of Aldicarb Residue Degradation Rates on Groundwater Chemistry in the Wisconsin Central Sands

George J. Kraft; Philip A. Helmke


Journal of Water Resource and Protection | 2016

Tools to Estimate Groundwater Levels in the Presence of Changes of Precipitation and Pumping

Jessica Haucke; Katherine Clancy; George J. Kraft

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David J. Mechenich

University of Wisconsin–Stevens Point

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Bryant A. Browne

University of Wisconsin–Stevens Point

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Katherine Clancy

University of Wisconsin–Stevens Point

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Will Stites

University of Wisconsin–Stevens Point

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Jessica Haucke

University of Wisconsin–Stevens Point

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William M. DeVita

University of Wisconsin–Stevens Point

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Birl Lowery

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Fred Madison

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Juliane M. Bowling

University of Wisconsin–Stevens Point

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Matthew D. Ruark

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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