By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Two years of drought lowered Mississippi's
underground water supplies, but recent rains have stopped
the loss and should be helping replenish
formations. Aquifers
are underground water stores found in sand and gravel
confined between layers of clay or solid rock. These
geologic formations overlap each other at varying depths and
extend for miles. Individuals and municipalities tap into
these aquifers with wells to supply the population's water
needs. Jim
Thomas, agricultural engineer with Mississippi State
University's Extension Service, said recent years' drought
has caused more water to be pulled from the aquifers and has
not allowed them to be refilled. "In
most situations when an aquifer is not over-extended, you
pump water out of it at a similar rate to what it recharges
under normal conditions," Thomas said. "What we've missed is
the recharge for the last two to three years." Dr.
Charles Wax, state climatologist and head of MSU
Geosciences, said the drought is certainly over. "It's
hard to say when we're in a drought and equally hard to say
when we're out of it, but we're definitely out of it now and
we've had more rain than normal since December," Wax
said. Wax
said a normal rain accumulation for Mississippi from
November through March is 27.9 inches. In this most recent
five months, the state has received 33.4 inches, or about
120 percent of normal. While December was drier than normal,
each of the other months has exceeded averages. "A lot
of this excess will go to replenish the deficit the state
has accumulated," Wax said. "There's a lot of water in the
environment, and rivers and lakes are filling up as the rain
is running off. There is even flooding in some areas. The
soil moisture is about 100 percent recharged in most areas
by now, and I imagine the shallow aquifers are already
beginning to get some of the recharge." Thomas
said the speed at which aquifers recharge depends on the
type of materials the water must move through. Water flows
through sandy soil much faster than it moves through clay.
And as it moves through the ground, it is naturally
filtered. "By the
time it gets to the formation, the water is virtually
clean," Thomas said. Aquifers
recharge very slowly. Sometimes the movement of water is
measured in inches or feet per month or per year. The more
saturated the soil is, the quicker these formations tend to
refill. "If we
can keep the rivers and lakes full and the surface water
systems full, the potential for recharge is much better,"
Thomas said. "What you get underground depends on the rain
and amount of water on top of the ground." The
alluvial aquifer under the Mississippi Delta supplies most
of the water for irrigation in this area of farmland. Thomas
said the aquifer usually drops in the summer, but comes back
by spring. For the last few years, the level has dropped and
the lack of rainfall has not replenished it to normal
levels. Released:
March 26, 2001
Mississippi
Agricultural News:
Recent rains
recharge underground water
For more information, contact: Dr. Jim Thomas, (662)
325-3103
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:25:38
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/agnews/an01/010326bc.htm
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