conditions and boundaries determined by the topography and geology

of the area.

Plant uptake as a basic for transfer to food chains

(to be discussed later) is no longer considered significant.

For

these reasons, it is useful to examine not only certain aspects of
the geology of the area but also the topography, hydrology, and
soils of the area.
Topography, Hydrology, and Soils
Among those areas of interest at NTS, because of Pu contamination,
are Yucca, Frenchman, and Groom valleys, which are all closed
basins as far as surface drainage is concerned.

That is, rainfall

into any of these basins and its erosive products,

insofar as water

per se is concerned, remain there and do not flow away from the

area into streams which eventually reach the Pacific as generally
occurs outside such basins.

In addition, because of the low rain-

fall in the region, soil surfaces outside the actual drainage
patterns do not receive sufficient water to reach the deep subsurface drainage patterns.
fers is very slow,
Yucea Flat.

Moreover, movement in subsurface aqui-

7 to 730 ft per yr (Anonymous,

1973), beneath

Although water moves faster in Frenchman's aquifers to

reach downward to the Paleozoic aquifer,

it apparently must pass

through Tertiary tuffs where the rate of movement is 0.2 ft per yr
or less.

Paleozoic aquifer depths vary from a few hundred feet to

a few thousand feet, depending on the depth of the alluvial materials which cover the basins' floors;

i.e., both these valleys, and

presumably Groom also, are filled from a few hundred feet to a few
thousand feet with alluvial material eroded from the surround ing
mountains,

it is thought, during earlier pluvial periods correlated

with times of extensive worldwide glaciers (Fernald et al., 1968).
Near the mountains, these pluvial fans are dissected by more recent
washes.
Soils in these areas are often ill-defined as to horizons and
frequently underlain by caliche hardpans.

Those soils derived from

limestone outcrops on the surrounding mountains are often strongly
calcareous as compared to those derived from volcanic materials.

;

169

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