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USGS Ground Water Information

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New & Noteworthy

  Ground-Water Availability in the United States (Circular 1323)

  CFP: Conduit Flow Process for MODFLOW-2005

  GSFLOW: A New Model for Simulation of Ground-Water and Surface-Water Interaction

  SEAWAT v4: Simulation of 3D Variable-Density Ground-Water Flow and Transport

USGS in Your State

USGS Water Science Centers are located in each state.

 [Map: There is a USGS Water Science Center office in each State.] Washington Oregon California Idaho Nevada Montana Wyoming Utah Colorado Arizona New Mexico North Dakota South Dakota Nebraska Kansas Oklahoma Texas Minnesota Iowa Missouri Arkansas Louisiana Wisconsin Illinois Mississippi Michigan Indiana Ohio Kentucky Tennessee Alabama Pennsylvania West Virginia Georgia Florida Caribbean Alaska Hawaii New York Vermont New Hampshire Maine Massachusetts South Carolina North Carolina Rhode Island Virginia Connecticut New Jersey Maryland-Delaware-D.C.

Artificial Recharge

Artificial recharge is the practice of increasing by artificial means the amount of water that enters a ground-water reservoir (Todd, 1959). This includes, for example, direction of water to the land surface through canals, irrigation furrows or sprinkler systems, and injection of water into the subsurface through wells.

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URL: http://water.usgs.gov/ogw/artificial_recharge.html
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Page Last Modified: Thursday, 06-Mar-2008 15:36:51 EST