{"accessLevel": "public", "bureauCode": ["010:12"], "contactPoint": {"@type": "vcard:Contact", "fn": "Bryan Schaap", "hasEmail": "mailto:bdschaap@usgs.gov"}, "description": "This coverage contains information about the probability of obtaining a \nwater supply within the Standing Rock Indian Reservation, Sioux County, \nNorth Dakota, and Corson County, South Dakota. The digital data were \nproduced by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) in cooperation with the \nU.S. Environmental Protection Agency.\n\t\t\nThe possibility of obtaining adequate supplies of good quality water from \nsurficial deposits generally is limited to bedrock formations overlying the \nPierre Shale where their total thickness is at least 150 feet, to four buried \nglacial valleys in eastern Sioux County, and to alluvium along Cedar Creek \nand the Cannonball and Missouri Rivers. In a few places, adequate supplies \nof stock or domestic water may be found in alluvium along \nthe Grand River and in a few terraces (Howells, 1982).\n\t\t\nIdentified units include: 1) Excellent--Well yields may range from 500 to \n1,000 gallons per minute. Dissolved-solids concentration probably is less \nthan 1,600 milligrams per liter; 2) Very good--May range from 200 to 500 \ngallons per minute. Dissolved-solids concentration probably is less than \n1,600 milligrams per liter; 3) Good--Well yields range from 10 to 200 gallons \nper minute. Dissolved-solids concentration is probably less than 1,600 \nmilligrams per liter; 4) Good to fair--Well yields range from 2 to 10 gallons \nper minute, locally may be larger; 5) Fair--Well yields may range from 2 \nto 10 gallons per minute. Greater chance that any water found will be of \npoor quality; 6) Fair to poor--Locally possible to obtain well yields of 1 to 5 \ngallons per minute. Water is commonly of poor quality; and 7) Very \npoor--Low probability of obtaining water. Any water found is likely to be \nof very poor quality.\n\t\t\nFigure 6 in Howells (1982) was scanned and digitized on-screen to create \nthis coverage. See cross reference information for more detail.", "distribution": [{"@type": "dcat:Distribution", "accessURL": "https://doi.org/10.5066/P9G6U6M1", "description": "Landing page for access to the data", "format": "XML", "mediaType": "application/http", "title": "Digital Data"}, {"@type": "dcat:Distribution", "description": "The metadata original format", "downloadURL": "https://data.usgs.gov/datacatalog/metadata/USGS.32b967b9-a564-4797-88d5-fb95c5f1a707.xml", "format": "XML", "mediaType": "text/xml", "title": "Original Metadata"}], "identifier": "http://datainventory.doi.gov/id/dataset/USGS_32b967b9-a564-4797-88d5-fb95c5f1a707", "keyword": ["Alluvium", "Corson County", "Cretaceous", "North Dakota", "Quaternary", "Sioux County", "South Dakota", "Standing Rock Indian Reservation", "Tertiary", "USGS:32b967b9-a564-4797-88d5-fb95c5f1a707", "buried-valley fill", "colluvium", "environment", "eolian deposits", "geoscientificInformation", "glacial till", "inlandWaters", "outwash", "shallow ground-water resources", "terrace"], "modified": "2020-11-17T00:00:00Z", "publisher": {"@type": "org:Organization", "name": "U.S. Geological Survey"}, "spatial": "-102.051501, 45.441269, -100.313436, 46.429634", "theme": ["geospatial"], "title": "Availability of shallow ground-water resources within the Standing Rock Indian Reservation, Sioux County, North Dakota, and Corson County, South Dakota"}