Data & Methodology — Gallia County

Full contaminant data, sample history, and sourcing for Gallia County. For readers who want to go beyond the summary.

Contaminant Data — All Analytes

10533 total samples analyzed across 19 analytes. Data spans 1964 to 2017.

Contaminant Samples Years Detection Rate Distribution LowModHigh vs. Limit vs. OH Avg
PFOA municipal 3 2024–2025 100%
188% of limit
Manganese 36 1964–1979 97%
4200% of limit ↑ 880% above
Iron 59 1964–1983 98%
158% of limit ↓ 71% below
Arsenic 5 1975–1979 80%
385% of limit ↑ 717% above
Sulfate 73 1964–2016 100%
35% of limit ↓ 39% below
Chloride 70 1964–2016 99%
14% of limit ↓ 68% below
Fluoride 6 1964–1966 83%
10% of limit ↓ 41% below
PFHxS municipal 3 2024–2025 0%
0% of limit
PFNA municipal 3 2024–2025 0%
0% of limit
PFOS municipal 3 2024–2025 0%
0% of limit
HFPO-DA (GenX) municipal 3 2024–2025 0%
0% of limit
Nitrite 23 1974–2016 96%
5% of limit ↓ 54% below
Fecal Coliform 1 1978 0%
Lead 1 1976 0%
PFBS municipal 3 2024–2025 0%
Nitrate 1 1967 0%
Sodium 47 1974–2017 98% ↓ 68% below
pH 18 1964–2008 100% ↓ 26% below
Hardness 51 1997–2017 100% ↓ 36% below

Distribution shows the share of samples in each concentration band relative to the EPA Maximum Contaminant Level (MCL): Low = below half the MCL, Moderate = between half and the MCL, High = above the MCL. Analytes without an MCL (e.g. sodium, pH) show — in the limit columns. State average is based on county median values across OH.

Data Coverage & Gaps

Well-sampled analytes (15+ samples)

  • Manganese 36 samples
  • Iron 59 samples
  • Sulfate 73 samples
  • Chloride 70 samples
  • Nitrite 23 samples
  • Sodium 47 samples
  • pH 18 samples
  • Hardness 51 samples

Limited data (<15 samples) — interpret with caution

  • Arsenic 5 samples
  • Fluoride 6 samples
  • Fecal Coliform 1 sample
  • Lead 1 sample
  • Nitrate 1 sample

No private-well PFAS data for Gallia County

We have no private well sampling data for PFAS compounds (PFOA, PFOS, PFNA, and related chemicals) in Gallia County. PFAS has been detected in local public water systems (UCMR 5 data) — indicated by the "municipal" badge in the table above — but this does not directly indicate private well contamination. PFAS testing for private wells requires a dedicated lab panel (~$300–$500). If you are near a military base, airport, or industrial site, consider testing proactively. Learn more about PFAS →

Public vs. Private Water in Gallia County

3 Active public water systems
28,959 Residents on public water
1% Households on private wells

Public water systems in Gallia County are regulated by the EPA and must test and report contaminant levels. Private well owners are responsible for their own testing — there is no routine monitoring of private wells by any government agency.

CDC Health Outcome Correlations

Where contaminants detected in Gallia County have established associations with specific health outcomes, we cross-reference CDC PLACES county-level prevalence data. This is a contextual signal, not a causal claim.

Contaminant Associated Condition Gallia County Prevalence OH Average Source Year
Arsenic Cancer prevalence 6.2% 6.8% 2020
Arsenic Kidney disease rate 2.9% 3.1% 2020

Source: CDC PLACES county-level estimates. Raw data: Download Gallia County CDC PLACES data →

Data Sources

This report aggregates data from the following public databases:

Methodology

Raw records are downloaded from the Water Quality Portal and normalized to µg/L (ppb). Records are deduplicated by sample ID and date, and certified outliers are excluded. Analyte names are mapped to EPA canonical forms. Detection rates, distribution bands, and MCL comparisons are computed from the normalized dataset.

Distribution bands use the EPA Maximum Contaminant Level as the threshold: concentrations below 50% of the MCL are classed as Low, between 50% and 100% as Moderate, and above 100% as High. For analytes without an MCL (sodium, hardness, pH), distribution is not computed.

State comparison uses the median of county median values across all counties in OH with at least one sample for that analyte.

Last updated: 2026-05-28

Full methodology →