Electronic Theses and Dissertations
Identifier
6373
Date
2018
Document Type
Dissertation
Degree Name
Doctor of Philosophy
Department
Earth Sciences
Committee Chair
Daniel Larsen
Committee Member
Larry Hughes
Committee Member
David Lumsden
Committee Member
Jose Pujol
Abstract
The unlined former Shelby County Landfill in Memphis, Tennessee, lies in the flood plain of the Wolf River and is known to be the source of low-level contamination in the underlying alluvial (shallow) and Memphis aquifers. Prior to closure, discovery of a hydrogeologic window in the upper Claiborne confining unit overlying the Memphis aquifer 0.2 km north of the landfill led to several groundwater investigations by the U.S. Geological Survey to evaluate the threat posed to the Memphis aquifer, the regional source for municipal water supplies. As the landfill nears its 30th year of post-closure monitoring, this study examines the evolution of groundwater quality to determine if conditions have improved or degraded with time as well as determine the usefulness of surface resistivity and induced polarization (IP) to identify preferential pathways of migration in subsurface sediments of the Gulf Coastal Plain. A 2011 comprehensive groundwater sampling event re-established the extent of impacted groundwater which were compared to historical groundwater quality data and used to plan a subsequent resistivity survey in 2012. Leachate impacted groundwater had not diminished along the northern landfill boundary in the shallow aquifer and continues to enter the Memphis aquifer immediately north of the landfill further degrading water quality at depth. The current post-closure sampling regime at the former Shelby County Landfill is inadequate to properly address the water quality problems at the landfill and should be reassessed. Resistivity and IP demonstrated the ability to identify impacted versus non-impacted groundwater, as well as the water-table boundary, landfill waste cells, sewer lines, and clay-rich sediments. Future research should continue to focus on areas north of the landfill to determine the contact relationship between the shallow and Memphis aquifers and further downgradient in the Memphis aquifer to determine the true extent of contamination from the former Shelby County Landfill.
Library Comment
Dissertation or thesis originally submitted to the local University of Memphis Electronic Theses & dissertation (ETD) Repository.
Recommended Citation
Schoefernacker, Scott Robert, "Evaluation and Evolution of a Groundwater Contaminant Plume at the Former Shelby County Landfill, Memphis, Tennessee" (2018). Electronic Theses and Dissertations. 1947.
https://digitalcommons.memphis.edu/etd/1947
Appendix A - Sampling Forms
AppendixB_SCL_ALLDATA.xlsx (393 kB)
Appendix B - All Data
Appendix B - Tabulated Data (1).zip (1532 kB)
Appendix B - Memphis Aquifer Sampled Results
Appendix C - 2011 Lab Reports.zip (5755 kB)
Appendix C - 2011 Lab Reports
Appendix D - Resistance Test and Raw Resistivity Data.zip (507 kB)
Appendix D - Resistance Tests and Raw Results
Appendix E - Inverted Resistivity Results and Output File.zip (17303 kB)
Appendix E - Inverted Resistivity Results and Output File
Comments
Data is provided by the student.