Groundwater Depletion
Dana Desonie, Ph.D.
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AUTHOR Dana Desonie, Ph.D.
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C HAPTER
Chapter 1. Groundwater Depletion
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Groundwater Depletion
• Explain the causes and consequences of groundwater depletion.
Is it good to make the desert bloom? Many sunny, arid regions are good for growing crops as long as water can be added. Some of the increase in productivity is due to farming in regions that are technically too dry. Groundwater can be used to make the desert bloom, but at what cost? And for how long? Eventually the wells will run dry. Groundwater Overuse
Some aquifers are overused; people pump out more water than is replaced. As the water is pumped out, the water table slowly falls, requiring wells to be dug deeper, which takes more money and energy. Wells may go completely dry if they are not deep enough to reach into the lowered water table. Other problems may stem from groundwater overuse. Subsidence and saltwater intrusion are two of them. Ogallala Aquifer
The Ogallala Aquifer supplies about one-third of the irrigation water in the United States. The Ogallala Aquifer is widely used by people for municipal and agricultural needs. ( Figure 1.2). The aquifer is found from 30 to 100 meters deep over an area of about 440,000 square kilometers! The water in the aquifer is mostly from the last ice age. About eight times more water is taken from the Ogallala Aquifer each year than is replenished. Much of the water is used for irrigation ( Figure 1.3). Subsidence
Lowering the water table may cause the ground surface to sink. Subsidence may occur beneath houses and other structures ( Figure 1.4). Salt Water Intrusion
When coastal aquifers are overused, salt water from the ocean may enter the aquifer, contaminating the aquifer and making it less useful for drinking and irrigation. Salt water incursion is a problem in developed coastal regions, such as on Hawaii. 1
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FIGURE 1.1 Intense drought has reduced groundwater levels in the southern U.S., particularly in Texas and New Mexico.
Summary
• When water is pumped from an aquifer, the water table declines and wells must be drilled deeper. • The Ogallala Aquifer was filled in the ice age but is being used to irrigate the farms of the Midwestern U.S. at a rate far greater than it is being replenished. • Ground subsidence and saltwater intrusion are two possible consequences of groundwater overuse.
Practice
Use this resource to answer the questions that follow. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o1QsCa7RmmU
MEDIA Click image to the left or use the URL below. URL: http://www.ck12.org/flx/render/embeddedobject/1549
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Chapter 1. Groundwater Depletion
FIGURE 1.2 The Ogallala Aquifer is found beneath eight states and is heavily used.
FIGURE 1.3 Farms in Kansas use central pivot irrigation, which is more efficient since water falls directly on the crops instead of being shot in the air. These fields are between 800 and 1600 meters (0.5 and 1 mile) in diameter.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
How has irrigation changed farming? What is leading to people’s demands for additional water? What do scientists need to see to better plan for future water use? What is the GRACE satellite doing? How does GRACE find groundwater aquifers? 3
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FIGURE 1.4 The San Joaquin Valley of California is one of the world’s major agricultural areas.
So much groundwater has been pumped that the land has
subsided many tens of feet.
6. How people know the aquifers are being depleted? 7. What is happening in India? what will happen if the water continues to decline? 8. What is the future of water? Review
1. What are some of the problems that come from overuse of groundwater? 2. How does salt water enter an aquifer? 3. In a location where the ground has subsided due to the extraction of groundwater from an aquifer, what do you think would happen if people tried to pump water back into the aquifer?
References 1. Courtesy of Chris Poulsen, National Drought Mitigation Center at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, and the GRACE science team. Map of groundwater levels in the United States . Public Domain 2. Courtesy of the US Geological Survey. Map of the Ogallala Aquifer . Public Domain 3. Courtesy of NASA/GSFC/METI/ERSDAC/JAROS and US/Japan ASTER Science Team. Satellite image of f arms using central pivot irrigation . Public Domain 4. Courtesy of the US Geological Survey. The ground has subsided tens of feet in the San Joaquin Valley in Ca lifornia due to groundwater used for agriculture . Public Domain
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