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Published byAngelina Hutchinson Modified over 9 years ago
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Aquifers are typically saturated regions of ground water which produce an economically feasible quantity of water to a well or spring
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Most land areas on Earth have some form of aquifer underlying them, sometimes at significant depths.
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There are two end members in the spectrum of types of aquifers; confined and unconfined Unconfined aquifers are sometimes also called water table aquifers, because their upper boundary is the water table. Typically (but not always) the shallowest aquifer at a given location is unconfined, meaning it does not have a confining layer (an aquitard or aquiclude) between it and the surface
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An aquifer under atmospheric pressure which is only partially filled with water. The top of the saturated area is known as the water table. It is also known as a water table aquifer. UNCONFINED AQUIFER
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A confined aquifer is sandwiched between confining beds (layers of impermeable materials such as clay which impede the movement of water into and out of the aquifer). Because of the confining beds, ground water in these aquifers is under high pressure
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CONFINED OR ARTESIAN AQUIFER
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An aquitard is a zone within the earth that restricts the flow of groundwater from one aquifer to another. It is usually made of non porous stone.
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The Ogallala Aquifer, also known as the High Plains Aquifer, is a vast yet shallow underground water table aquifer located beneath the Great Plains in the United States. One of the world's largest aquifers, it covers an area of approximately 174,000 mi² in portions of the eight states of South Dakota, Nebraska, Wyoming, Colorado, Kansas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, and Texas.
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“The High Plains is almost wholly unfit for cultivation,” wrote Major Stephen H. Long in 1819, while surveying the western U.S. territories. Long drew a map and emblazoned the High Plains with the label – “The Great Desert“. But hidden underground lay the Ogallala Aquifer, holding more water than Lake Huron, and spread over an area seven times the size.
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The bulk of the aquifer’s water is ancient, having filled the Ogallala rock formation during the wetter climate at the end of the Ice Age. The water, as is usual in aquifers, does not lie in a vast pool or river, but soaks the porous rock, and flows very slowly through it. A drop of water that takes four days to cut across Kansas in the Arkansas River, would take thousands of years to cross that distance through the aquifer 37 37
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But the water drains fast enough down through the permeable rock towards a well bottom, where a pump can suck it up above ground in a stream. In the early 1900’s, the wind-powered pump allowed farmers to move to the High Plains, drill wells for drinking water, and grow crops during the wetter years of those decades 38. 38
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Farming in those early years on the High Plains was tough!
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In the 1940’s, the electric pump allowed farmers to draw water faster, and to irrigate. Since then, Americans, who had years ago slaughtered the buffalo and plowed under the grasses, have been draining the Ogallala. With little rain and river water to recharge it, the water table of the Ogallala Aquifer has dropped more than 10 feet (3 meters) on the average.
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Center-pivot sprinklers are among the irrigation methods used in the High Plains. Large quantities of groundwater pumped from the Ogallala Aquifer allows these semiarid western lands to yield abundant harvests.
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USGS personnel making ground-water level measurement.
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As of 2005, the total depletion since pre-development amounted to 253 million acre-feet. Some estimates say it will dry up in as little as 25 years. Many farmers in the Texas High Plains, which rely particularly on the underground source, are now turning away from irrigated agriculture as they become aware of the hazards of over pumping.
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Some High Plains farmers have switched acres to a native plant – the sunflower. With its six- foot deep root, the sunflower, like its old prairie companion, the buffalo, can live well in high winds and on scant water.
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Sunflowers ready to harvest in eastern Colorado
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About 27 percent of the irrigated land in the United States overlies this aquifer system, which yields about 30 percent of the nation's ground water used for irrigation. In addition, the aquifer system provides drinking water to 82 percent of the people who live within the aquifer boundary.
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