AMHERST - A professor at UMass Amherst is asking for people's help as his team researches the impact groundwater levels are having in Massachusetts. Massachusetts is coming off one of the wettest ...
The world’s groundwater aquifers are taking a beating. Decades of unrestrained pumping by thirsty farms and fast-growing cities have drained these underground rock beds, which hold more than 95 ...
Groundwater is rarely static. Its level and flow change throughout the year due to rainfall patterns, temperature variation, irrigation, nearby construction activity, and natural drainage ...
The Colorado River makes life possible in many Western cities and supports agriculture that sustains people throughout the country. Most of the river's water begins as snowmelt from the mountainous ...
Interview with Professor Graeme Swindles, School of Natural and Built Environment, Queen’s University Belfast, U.K. Author of PLOS One paper: Swindles GT, Mullan DJ, Brannigan NT, Fewster RE, Sim TG, ...
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers predicts Great Lakes water levels will continue to drop until April, then rise with spring weather. All Great Lakes are below their 2023-2024 levels. The U.S. Army ...
Lake Travis water levels leapt by 5 feet after a heavy rainstorm doused parts of central Texas with up to 8 inches of rain last Thursday. Texas has suffered from severe drought throughout the summer, ...
Climate change will dramatically impact streamflow and its contributions to the Colorado River by increasing forest water use and reducing groundwater levels, new study finds. The Colorado River makes ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results