Aquifers
are very important. In many areas they are our main source of freshwater.
In order to get water from an aquifer, we drill a well and pump
the water to the surface. The water in aquifers is valuable because
it is relatively clean. Soil cleans and filters rainwater as it
seeps through the earth. Soil absorbs many chemical compounds and
waste.
Most
aquifers lie deep under the ground. Some are small and provide water
to a only few homes. Some are so big they spread across a few states!
For example, the Floridan aquifer is so large it crosses Mississippi,
Alabama, Georgia, Florida, and South Carolina! (See map of Floridan
aquifer.) The Floridan aquifer is the main source of freshwater
for people living in the Coastal Plain region of the Altamaha
River watershed (see map
of Geological Regions). Freshwater in the Piedmont region
is supplied by surface water (for more information on water sources
see Where does
YOUR water come from?).
The
table you can't eat off of
In order to reach large amounts of groundwater, you must go deeper
than the water table. For a given area, the water table is the depth
of the highest layer of soil underground that is saturated with
water. This wet layer sits below layers that are partly dry (see
the diagram above).
The
depth of a water table may go up and down. Rainfall raises the water
table. Pumping water from wells lowers it. To find your local water
table, start digging. You'll know when you've found it. Groundwater
will start seeping into and filling your hole.
The
depth of the water table is different in different places. If you
dig a hole at the ocean shore, you will hit the water table within
1 m (3 feet). If you dig a hole in the desert, you will be digging
a long time before you find water. In the desert, where there is
little rain, the water table may be hundreds of meters (hundreds
of feet) below ground!
Taking
care of our aquifers
Our aquifers can be damaged by pollution and by withdrawing too
much water.
Pollution
Groundwater becomes contaminated when the rainwater that drips into
the earth is contaminated. Pollution and waste may soak through
the ground. Rainwater that flows over paved surfaces, such as parking
lots, may pick up oil and chemicals. Pollution in the air also makes
its way into groundwater. Cars and industries produce toxic gases.
Some acidic gases include sulfur dioxide (SO2) and nitrogen
dioxide (NO2). These chemicals
combine with moisture in the air and fall back to earth as acid
rain.
Withdrawing
too much water
As human population, food production, and industries grow we need
more and more water. Since the time your parents were born, the
world population has doubled! In 1960, the human population was
3 billion. Today, it is 6 billion. This means we need to provide
water for 3 billion (3,000,000,000!) more people.
As
our need for water increases, we withdraw more and more from our
aquifers. In fact, in many places we are taking it faster than nature
is putting it back. This means that we are slowly emptying our aquifers.
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