News

Bhopal: A govt report reveals that while groundwater extraction levels are semi-critical in the Bhopal division, they've reached the ‘critical' and ‘o.
A new study found that land use (agricultural or forested) and the season (wet or dry) significantly impact groundwater quality, but in different ways.
Sandton contended that the right to extract groundwater is a real property interest and that the captured floodwater was not severed from the real property, thus remaining part of the real property.
THOUSAND PALMS, Calif. (KESQ) – New research is showing that groundwater from the Colorado River Basin, or CRB, is depleting more quickly than most first thought. Researchers from Arizona State ...
ASU researcher warns: Without groundwater changes, few will be able to dig wells New groundwater research is raising serious questions about the future of rural communities in Arizona like Wenden.
New high-tech maps developed by Stanford could fast track groundwater recharge: Here's how it works By Spencer Christian and Tim Didion , KGO Sunday, June 1, 2025 ...
Oil leak impacts groundwater, stream and pond in Waterbury, officials said no risk to the public but could impact waterways.
The amount of groundwater that has been pumped out of the Colorado River Basin since 2003 is enough to fill Lake Mead, researchers report in a study published earlier this week.
To put it into perspective, Abdelmohsen said from 2015 to 2024, the amount of groundwater used in Arizona was equivalent to the storage capacity of Lake Mead, the largest reservoir in the U.S ...
Eight U.S. states are nearing a tipping point as groundwater levels fall at alarming rates, threatening agriculture, drinking supplies, and long-term habitability. Driven by extreme drought ...
As the Colorado River’s reservoirs have declined, even larger amounts of groundwater have been drained from aquifers. Using satellite data, scientists have estimated the vast water losses.
Mercury, PFAS and other harmful pollutants are moving in a chemical plant site's groundwater into the Detroit River — at up to 60 gallons per minute.