Scientists Map Huge Undersea Freshwater Aquifer Off U.S. Northeast

An electromagnetic receiver.
An electromagnetic receiver used in the study being deployed off the research vessel Marcus Langseth. (Image: via Kerry Key)

In a new survey of the sub-seafloor off the U.S. Northeast coast, scientists have made a surprising discovery: a gigantic aquifer of relatively fresh water trapped in porous sediments lying below the salty ocean. It appears to be the largest such formation yet found in the world.

The aquifer stretches from the shore at least from Massachusetts to New Jersey, extending more or less continuously out about 50 miles to the edge of the continental shelf. If found on the surface, it would create a lake covering some 15,000 square miles.

Scientists have mapped a huge aquifer off the U.S. Northeast (hatched area). Solid yellow or white lines with triangles show ship tracks. Dotted white line near shore shows edge of the glacial ice sheet that melted about 15,000 years ago. Further out, dark blue, the continental shelf drops off into the Atlantic abyss.
Scientists have mapped a huge aquifer off the U.S. Northeast (hatched area). Solid yellow or white lines with triangles show ship tracks. The dotted white line near the shore shows the edge of the glacial ice sheet that melted about 15,000 years ago. Further out, dark blue, the continental shelf drops off into the Atlantic abyss. (Image: via Gustafson et al., 2019)

The study, which appears in the journal Scientific Reports, suggests that such aquifers probably lie off many other coasts worldwide and could provide desperately needed water for arid areas that are now in danger of running out. The researchers employed innovative measurements of electromagnetic waves to map the water, which remained invisible to other technologies. Lead author Chloe Gustafson, a Ph.D. candidate at Columbia University’s Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, said:

The first hints of the aquifer came in the 1970s when companies drilled off the coastline for oil, but sometimes instead hit fresh water. Drill holes are just pinpricks in the seafloor, and scientists debated whether the water deposits were just isolated pockets or something bigger.

Starting about 20 years ago, study coauthor Kerry Key, now a Lamont-Doherty geophysicist, helped oil companies develop techniques to use electromagnetic imaging of the sub-seafloor to look for oil. More recently, Key decided to see if some form of the technology could also be used to find freshwater deposits.

In 2015, he and Rob L. Evans of Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution spent 10 days on the Lamont-Doherty research vessel Marcus G. Langseth making measurements off southern New Jersey and the Massachusetts island of Martha’s Vineyard, where scattered drill holes had hit freshwater-rich sediments.

An electromagnetic receiver used in the study being deployed off the research vessel Marcus Langseth.
An electromagnetic receiver used in the study was deployed off the research vessel Marcus Langseth. (Image: via Kerry Key)

They dropped receivers to the seafloor to measure electromagnetic fields below, and the degree to which natural disruptions, such as solar winds and lightning strikes, resonated through them. An apparatus towed behind the ship also emitted artificial electromagnetic pulses and recorded the same type of reactions from the subseafloor.

Both methods work in a simple way: Saltwater is a better conductor of electromagnetic waves than freshwater, so freshwater stood out as a band of low conductance. Analyses indicated that the deposits are not scattered; they are more or less continuous, starting at the shoreline and extending far out within the shallow continental shelf — in some cases, as far as 75 miles.

For the most part, they begin at around 600 feet below the ocean floor and bottom out at about 1,200 feet. The consistency of the data from both study areas allowed the researchers to infer with a high degree of confidence that freshwater sediments continuously span not just New Jersey and much of Massachusetts, but the intervening coasts of Rhode Island, Connecticut, and New York.

This aquifer might be larger than the Ogallala Aquifer

They estimate that the region holds at least 670 cubic miles of fresh water. If future research shows the aquifer extends further north and south, it would rival the great Ogallala Aquifer, which supplies vital groundwater to eight Great Plains states, from South Dakota to Texas.

The water probably got under the seabed in one of two different ways, say the researchers. Some 15,000 to 20,000 years ago, toward the end of the last glacial age, much of the world’s water was locked up in mile-deep ice; in North America, it extended through what is now northern New Jersey, Long Island, and the New England coast.

Sea levels were much lower, exposing much of what is now the underwater U.S. continental shelf. When the ice melted, sediments formed huge river deltas on top of the shelf, and freshwater got trapped there in scattered pockets. Later, sea levels rose. Up to now, the trapping of such “fossil” water has been the common explanation for any freshwater found under the ocean.

However, the researchers say the new findings indicate that the aquifer is also being fed by modern subterranean runoff from the land. Key said:

He likened this to a person pressing up and down on a sponge to suck in water from the sponge’s sides. Also, the aquifer is generally freshest near the shore, and saltier the farther out you go, suggesting that it mixes gradually with ocean water over time.

Terrestrial fresh water usually contains less than 1 part per thousand of salt, and this is about the value found undersea near land. By the time the aquifer reaches its outer edges, it rises to 15 parts per thousand (typical seawater is 35 parts per thousand). Key said:

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