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posted by Fnord666 on Tuesday July 23 2019, @12:44PM   Printer-friendly
from the as-opposed-to-air-water dept.

Submitted via IRC for Bytram

Americans are drilling deeper than ever for fresh water

Groundwater may be out of sight, but for over 100 million Americans who rely on it for their lives and livelihoods it's anything but out of mind. Unfortunately, wells are going dry and scientists are just beginning to understand the complex landscape of groundwater use.

Now, researchers at UC Santa Barbara have published the first comprehensive account of groundwater wells across the contiguous United States. They analyzed data from nearly 12 million wells throughout the country in records stretching back decades. Their findings appear in the journal Nature Sustainability.

[...] Focusing on regions known to depend on groundwater, such as California's Central Valley, the pair collected a wealth of information about different types of wells across the country. Groundwater is generally a matter of state management, so they had to cull their data from a variety of sources. "[That was] one of the biggest hurdles," said Perrone, an assistant professor in UC Santa Barbara's environmental studies department.

[...] Scientists know that groundwater depletion is causing some wells to run dry. Where conditions are right, drilling new and deeper wells can stave off this issue, for those who can afford it. Indeed, Perrone and Jasechko found that new wells are getting deeper between 1.4 and 9.2 times as often as they are being drilled shallower.

What's more, the researchers found that 79% of areas they looked at showed well-deepening trends across a window spanning 1950 to 2015. Hotspots of this activity include California's Central Valley, the High Plains of southwestern Kansas, and the Atlantic Coastal Plain, among other regions.

"We were surprised how widespread deeper well drilling is," Jasechko said. News media had documented the trend in places like the Central Valley, but it is pervasive in many other parts of the country as well. This includes places like Iowa, where groundwater hasn't been studied as intensively, he noted.

[...] This new paper provides additional context to one of Perrone and Jasechko's past studies -- completed with professors Grant Ferguson of the University of Saskatchewan, and Jennifer McIntosh at the University of Arizona -- where they found that the United States may have less usable groundwater than previously thought. It also ties into Perrone's work regarding groundwater policy across the U.S. In the future, she plans to look at the legal frameworks surrounding groundwater use. "My goal is to understand what types of laws are being passed in the western 17 states to manage groundwater withdrawals in more sustainable ways," she said.

Debra Perrone, Scott Jasechko. Deeper well drilling an unsustainable stopgap to groundwater depletion. Nature Sustainability, 2019; DOI: 10.1038/s41893-019-0325-z


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  • (Score: 5, Interesting) by Rosco P. Coltrane on Tuesday July 23 2019, @01:51PM (1 child)

    by Rosco P. Coltrane (4757) on Tuesday July 23 2019, @01:51PM (#870321)

    Drill for freshwater deep enough in the US nowadays, and what you're likely to find is fracking fluids that have escaped into the water tables under pressure.

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  • (Score: 2) by Runaway1956 on Tuesday July 23 2019, @02:16PM

    by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday July 23 2019, @02:16PM (#870328) Journal

    Yes, that. Anything dumped into or on the ground is going to find it's way into the water. People with shallow wells seem to have learned that first - people with deeper wells are learning it later.