Analyzing Surface Water and Groundwater Interactions from PFAS Contamination in the West Plains Region of Spokane County

Faculty Mentor

Chad Pritchard

Presentation Type

Poster

Start Date

4-14-2026 9:00 AM

End Date

4-14-2026 11:00 AM

Location

PUB NCR

Primary Discipline of Presentation

Geosciences

Abstract

The West Plains region of Spokane County has been significantly impacted by PFAS contamination due to the decades-long use of aqueous film-forming foam (AFFF) for firefighting training at both Fairchild Air Force Base (FAFB) and the Spokane International Airport (SIA). Groundwater contamination is significant, but surface waters are impacted by the contamination as well. Groundwater flows to the north and west, meaning surface water bodies that make up the northern boundaries (Deep Creek, Latah Creek, and the Spokane River) can be impacted by PFAS contamination. The West Plains aquifer system is complex but combining data about aquifer flow with information about where the aquifers feed into surface water bodies can help us predict where we will find PFAS contamination in the surface waters. Surface waters are important to study as they form the boundaries of the West Plains and often function as a fast and diffusive transport mechanisms when compared to PFAS transport in groundwater.

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Apr 14th, 9:00 AM Apr 14th, 11:00 AM

Analyzing Surface Water and Groundwater Interactions from PFAS Contamination in the West Plains Region of Spokane County

PUB NCR

The West Plains region of Spokane County has been significantly impacted by PFAS contamination due to the decades-long use of aqueous film-forming foam (AFFF) for firefighting training at both Fairchild Air Force Base (FAFB) and the Spokane International Airport (SIA). Groundwater contamination is significant, but surface waters are impacted by the contamination as well. Groundwater flows to the north and west, meaning surface water bodies that make up the northern boundaries (Deep Creek, Latah Creek, and the Spokane River) can be impacted by PFAS contamination. The West Plains aquifer system is complex but combining data about aquifer flow with information about where the aquifers feed into surface water bodies can help us predict where we will find PFAS contamination in the surface waters. Surface waters are important to study as they form the boundaries of the West Plains and often function as a fast and diffusive transport mechanisms when compared to PFAS transport in groundwater.