Magnitude, Effects, and Management of Groundwater Depletion

Wednesday, April 14, 2010: 11:05 a.m.-12:05 p.m.
Continental B (Westin Tabor Center, Denver)
Reduction in the volume of groundwater in storage in the subsurface is a natural outcome of development and withdrawal through wells of large quantities of groundwater. In some cases, the depletion is so large as to cause reduced well yields, deterioration of water quality, reduced reserves, unsustainability of pumpage, and environmental damage (through subsidence and reduced discharge of freshwater to springs, lakes, streams, wetlands, and/or estuaries). But the magnitude of volume of depletion is rarely assessed. In this session. we present  papers that: • Quantify the magnitude of depletion in developed aquifer systems • Offer new methods to estimate depletion • Describe effects of depletion • describe management approaches to deal with or offset depletion • Illustrative case histories from around the world.
Moderators:
Leonard F. Konikow and William L. Cunningham
11:25 a.m.
Monitoring Ground Water Variability Using the GRACE Satellite Gravity Mission: An Application to Ground Water Withdrawal in Northern India
John Wahr, Ph.D., University of Colorado; Virendra Tiwari, Ph.D., National Geophysical Research Institute; Sean Swenson, PhD., National Center for Atmospheric Research
11:45 a.m.
Groundwater Flow Dynamics and Storage Depletion in the North China Plain
Guoliang Cao, University of Alabama; Jie Liu, Peking University; Chunmiao Zheng, University of Alabama; Laurent Longuevergne, University of Texas at Austin; Bridget R. Scanlon, University of Texas at Austin
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