GROUND WATER
(A Psalm of David.) The earth [is] the LORD'S, and the fulness thereof; the world, and they that dwell therein. For he hath founded it upon the seas, and established it upon the floods.(Psalms 24:1-2)
What is groundwater?
Groundwater is water that comes from the ground. Sounds easy,
doesn't it? Amazingly, many people use groundwater but don't even know
it. In fact, half of everyone in the United States drinks groundwater
everyday! Groundwater is even used to irrigate crops which grow food
for tonight's dinner.
Where does groundwater come from? Groundwater comes from rain,
snow, sleet, and hail that soaks into the ground. The water moves down
into the ground because of gravity, passing between particles of soil,
sand, gravel, or rock until it reaches a depth where the ground is
filled, or saturated, with water. The area that is filled with water is
called the saturated zone and the top of this zone is called the water
table. Makes sense, doesn't it? The top of the water is a table! The
water table may be very near the ground's surface or it may be hundreds
of feet below.
Think about this: have you ever dug a hole in sand next to an
ocean or lake? What happens? As you're digging, you eventually reach
water, right? That water is groundwater. The water in lakes, rivers, or
oceans is called surface water...it's on the surface. Groundwater and
surface water sometimes trade places. Groundwater can move through the
ground and into a lake or stream. Water in a lake can soak down into the
ground and become groundwater.
Groundwater is stored in the ground in
materials like gravel or sand. It's kind of
like the earth is a big sponge holding all that
water. Water can also move through rock formations like
sandstone or through cracks in rocks.
An area that holds a lot of water, which
can be pumped up with a well, is called an
aquifer. Wells pump groundwater from the
aquifer and then pipes deliver the water to cities,
houses in the country, or to crops.
Most groundwater is clean, but
groundwater can become polluted, or
contaminated. It can become polluted
from leaky underground tanks that store
gasoline, leaky landfills, or when people apply
too much fertilizer or pesticides on their
fields or lawns. When pollutants leak, spill, or
are carelessly dumped on the ground they can
move through the soil.
Because it is deep in the ground, groundwater
pollution is generally difficult and expensive
to clean up. Sometimes people have to find new
places to dig a well because their own
became contaminated.
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