The Ogallala aquifer is drying up

waltky

Wise ol' monkey
Feb 6, 2011
26,211
2,590
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Okolona, KY
The Ogallala aquifer is drying up...
eek.gif

Rural areas at risk as water levels fall in massive aquifer
Tue, Nov 14, 2017 - The draining of a massive aquifer that underlies portions of eight states in the central US is drying up streams, causing fish to disappear and threatening the livelihood of farmers who rely on it for their crops.
The Ogallala’s water levels have been dropping for decades as irrigators pump water faster than rainfall can recharge it. An analysis of federal data found the Ogallala aquifer shrank twice as fast over the past six years compared with the previous 60, the Denver Post reports. The drawdown has become so severe that streams are drying at a rate of 10km per year and some highly resilient fish are disappearing. In rural areas, farmers and ranchers worry they will no longer have enough water for their livestock and crops as the aquifer is depleted.

The aquifer lost 1.32 million hectare-meters of storage between 2013 and 2015, the US Geological Survey said in a June report. “Now I never know, from one minute to the next, when I turn on a faucet or hydrant, whether there will be water or not,” said Lois Scott, 75, who lives west of Cope, Colorado, north of the frequently bone-dry bed of the Arikaree River. A 12m well her grandfather dug by hand in 1914 gave water until recently, she said, lamenting the loss of lawns where children once frolicked and green pastures for cows.

Scott is now considering a move to Brush, Colorado, and leaving her family’s historic homestead farm. “This will truly become the Great American Desert,” she said. Also known as the High Plains Aquifer, the Ogallala underlies 453,000km2, including parts of Colorado, Wyoming Kansas, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma, South Dakota and Texas. That is one of the primary agricultural regions of the US, producing US$35 billion in crops annually.

Farmers and ranchers have been tapping into the aquifer since the 1930s to boost production and help them get by in times of drought. However, overpumping has dried up 576km of surface rivers and streams across a 518km2 area covering eastern Colorado, western Kansas and Nebraska, according to researchers from Colorado State University and Kansas State University. If farmers keep pumping water at the current pace, another 458km2 of rivers and streams would be lost before 2060, the researchers said.

Rural areas at risk as water levels fall in massive aquifer - Taipei Times
 
Has Nestle been bottling the water from there and selling it? They probably have a couple of 12-inch wells sunk deep.
 
The Ogallala aquifer is drying up...
eek.gif

Rural areas at risk as water levels fall in massive aquifer
Tue, Nov 14, 2017 - The draining of a massive aquifer that underlies portions of eight states in the central US is drying up streams, causing fish to disappear and threatening the livelihood of farmers who rely on it for their crops.
The Ogallala’s water levels have been dropping for decades as irrigators pump water faster than rainfall can recharge it. An analysis of federal data found the Ogallala aquifer shrank twice as fast over the past six years compared with the previous 60, the Denver Post reports. The drawdown has become so severe that streams are drying at a rate of 10km per year and some highly resilient fish are disappearing. In rural areas, farmers and ranchers worry they will no longer have enough water for their livestock and crops as the aquifer is depleted.

The aquifer lost 1.32 million hectare-meters of storage between 2013 and 2015, the US Geological Survey said in a June report. “Now I never know, from one minute to the next, when I turn on a faucet or hydrant, whether there will be water or not,” said Lois Scott, 75, who lives west of Cope, Colorado, north of the frequently bone-dry bed of the Arikaree River. A 12m well her grandfather dug by hand in 1914 gave water until recently, she said, lamenting the loss of lawns where children once frolicked and green pastures for cows.

Scott is now considering a move to Brush, Colorado, and leaving her family’s historic homestead farm. “This will truly become the Great American Desert,” she said. Also known as the High Plains Aquifer, the Ogallala underlies 453,000km2, including parts of Colorado, Wyoming Kansas, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma, South Dakota and Texas. That is one of the primary agricultural regions of the US, producing US$35 billion in crops annually.

Farmers and ranchers have been tapping into the aquifer since the 1930s to boost production and help them get by in times of drought. However, overpumping has dried up 576km of surface rivers and streams across a 518km2 area covering eastern Colorado, western Kansas and Nebraska, according to researchers from Colorado State University and Kansas State University. If farmers keep pumping water at the current pace, another 458km2 of rivers and streams would be lost before 2060, the researchers said.

Rural areas at risk as water levels fall in massive aquifer - Taipei Times

It rained here the other day, so I'm calling out on FAKE NEWS. No one cares, we'll all be dead before it becomes a problem. But Muslims, I bet it was the Muzzies, yeah, let's go kill all the Muslims in a big sacrifice and then God will bring back the water.

Yes, this is how much we're evolved in the last 2,000 years. No one single bit. Ugh ugh, ugh.
 
The Ogallala aquifer is drying up...
eek.gif

Rural areas at risk as water levels fall in massive aquifer
Tue, Nov 14, 2017 - The draining of a massive aquifer that underlies portions of eight states in the central US is drying up streams, causing fish to disappear and threatening the livelihood of farmers who rely on it for their crops.
The Ogallala’s water levels have been dropping for decades as irrigators pump water faster than rainfall can recharge it. An analysis of federal data found the Ogallala aquifer shrank twice as fast over the past six years compared with the previous 60, the Denver Post reports. The drawdown has become so severe that streams are drying at a rate of 10km per year and some highly resilient fish are disappearing. In rural areas, farmers and ranchers worry they will no longer have enough water for their livestock and crops as the aquifer is depleted.

The aquifer lost 1.32 million hectare-meters of storage between 2013 and 2015, the US Geological Survey said in a June report. “Now I never know, from one minute to the next, when I turn on a faucet or hydrant, whether there will be water or not,” said Lois Scott, 75, who lives west of Cope, Colorado, north of the frequently bone-dry bed of the Arikaree River. A 12m well her grandfather dug by hand in 1914 gave water until recently, she said, lamenting the loss of lawns where children once frolicked and green pastures for cows.

Scott is now considering a move to Brush, Colorado, and leaving her family’s historic homestead farm. “This will truly become the Great American Desert,” she said. Also known as the High Plains Aquifer, the Ogallala underlies 453,000km2, including parts of Colorado, Wyoming Kansas, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma, South Dakota and Texas. That is one of the primary agricultural regions of the US, producing US$35 billion in crops annually.

Farmers and ranchers have been tapping into the aquifer since the 1930s to boost production and help them get by in times of drought. However, overpumping has dried up 576km of surface rivers and streams across a 518km2 area covering eastern Colorado, western Kansas and Nebraska, according to researchers from Colorado State University and Kansas State University. If farmers keep pumping water at the current pace, another 458km2 of rivers and streams would be lost before 2060, the researchers said.

Rural areas at risk as water levels fall in massive aquifer - Taipei Times

It rained here the other day, so I'm calling out on FAKE NEWS. No one cares, we'll all be dead before it becomes a problem. But Muslims, I bet it was the Muzzies, yeah, let's go kill all the Muslims in a big sacrifice and then God will bring back the water.

Yes, this is how much we're evolved in the last 2,000 years. No one single bit. Ugh ugh, ugh.
Crybaby.
 
The Ogallala aquifer is drying up...
eek.gif

Rural areas at risk as water levels fall in massive aquifer
Tue, Nov 14, 2017 - The draining of a massive aquifer that underlies portions of eight states in the central US is drying up streams, causing fish to disappear and threatening the livelihood of farmers who rely on it for their crops.
The Ogallala’s water levels have been dropping for decades as irrigators pump water faster than rainfall can recharge it. An analysis of federal data found the Ogallala aquifer shrank twice as fast over the past six years compared with the previous 60, the Denver Post reports. The drawdown has become so severe that streams are drying at a rate of 10km per year and some highly resilient fish are disappearing. In rural areas, farmers and ranchers worry they will no longer have enough water for their livestock and crops as the aquifer is depleted.

The aquifer lost 1.32 million hectare-meters of storage between 2013 and 2015, the US Geological Survey said in a June report. “Now I never know, from one minute to the next, when I turn on a faucet or hydrant, whether there will be water or not,” said Lois Scott, 75, who lives west of Cope, Colorado, north of the frequently bone-dry bed of the Arikaree River. A 12m well her grandfather dug by hand in 1914 gave water until recently, she said, lamenting the loss of lawns where children once frolicked and green pastures for cows.

Scott is now considering a move to Brush, Colorado, and leaving her family’s historic homestead farm. “This will truly become the Great American Desert,” she said. Also known as the High Plains Aquifer, the Ogallala underlies 453,000km2, including parts of Colorado, Wyoming Kansas, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma, South Dakota and Texas. That is one of the primary agricultural regions of the US, producing US$35 billion in crops annually.

Farmers and ranchers have been tapping into the aquifer since the 1930s to boost production and help them get by in times of drought. However, overpumping has dried up 576km of surface rivers and streams across a 518km2 area covering eastern Colorado, western Kansas and Nebraska, according to researchers from Colorado State University and Kansas State University. If farmers keep pumping water at the current pace, another 458km2 of rivers and streams would be lost before 2060, the researchers said.

Rural areas at risk as water levels fall in massive aquifer - Taipei Times

This has been occurring for decades, and it won’t be dealt with until it’s too late. This country hasn’t had a major dam project in many years. They killed the Two Forks dam in the 80’s and we will rue the day the dam wasn’t built.
 
No more diet Pepsi ???
Click...... BANG !
That shit is the least of your problems. Don't forget your flu vaccine !!! It's almost that time !!!
 
Don't forget your flu vaccine !!! It's almost that time !!!

Flu season has come early `round here...

... dat time is now.
 
It rained here the other day, so I'm calling out on FAKE NEWS. No one cares, we'll all be dead before it becomes a problem. But Muslims, I bet it was the Muzzies, yeah, let's go kill all the Muslims in a big sacrifice and then God will bring back the water.

Yes, this is how much we're evolved in the last 2,000 years. No one single bit. Ugh ugh, ugh.

You really are an idiot...of course misuse of water resources is a problem...but just wait...it won't be long before one of you wackos tries to blame climate change on the problem rather than bad management of water resources.
 
Funny. We have the resources to at least partially address this problem, but not with the present GOP in power. This is not the GOP that helped give us the Interstate System.
 

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