U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) | July 18th, 1988
Summary
The Los Osos Valley ground-water basin is located on the coast of central California. It extends about 3 miles inland and an unknown distance offshore, where it is in h
The Los Osos Valley ground-water basin is located on the coast of central California. It extends about 3 miles inland and an unknown distance offshore, where it is in hydraulic connection with the Pacific Ocean. Its maximum onshore depth is about 1,000 feet. Ground-water flow in the basin was investigated using existing data, geologic mapping, drilling and measurements of potentiometric head, water quality, and streamflow.
The basin is underlain largely by relatively impermeable rocks of the Franciscan Complex. Basin fill consists of unconsolidated, complexly layered sediments of Miocene age or younger. Individual beds are generally thin and discontinuous. A three-dimensional digital model of the basin was developed and calibrated to match potentiometric heads and head-dependent flows during water years 1970-77 and 1986. The model simulated poorly the steep vertical potentiometric heads, and it could not simulate perched water tables. In other respects, model results were good and not highly sensitive to likely errors in input data.
Infiltrated rainfall contributes about 80 percent of annual recharge to the ground-water basin, and ground-water inflow accounts for almost all the remainder. Net recharge from Los Osos Creek is small. In water year 1986, outflow from the basin consisted of net municipal pumpage (24 percent), net agricultural pumpage (25 percent), net outflow across the ocean boundary (26 percent), perched-water runoff (16 percent), and phreatophyte transpiration (9 percent). During water years 1970-77 net municipal pumpage and net agricultural pumpage accounted for only 10 and 22 percent of total outflow, respectively.
The population of Los Osos Valley is expected to increase by about 20,000 people by the year 2010, and municipal water use is expected to increase by about 1,700 acre-feet per year. The model was used to simulate the effects of various future water-supply and wastewater-disposal alternatives on the ground-water system. Results indicated that if wastewater is centrally treated and recharged to the ground-water basin, the entire projected municipal water demand can be met with locally pumped ground water without inducing seawater intrusion, even during droughts lasting 1 to 3 years. If wastewater is exported from the basin, however, large amounts of seawater intrusion are likely to occur even if nearly half of the municipal water demand is met with imported water.