Groundwater and Aquifers: How Underground Water Works
Beneath the surface of the continental United States, an estimated 90 percent of the nation's liquid freshwater sits not in lakes or rivers but underground — saturating porous rock and sediment formations that most people will never see. These formations, called aquifers, supply drinking water to roughly 140 million Americans (U.S. Geological Survey, Groundwater Use in the United States). Understanding how water enters, moves through, and exits these systems matters for agriculture, municipal supply, and long-term land use decisions across every region of the country.
Definition and scope
An aquifer is a saturated, permeable underground formation — rock, sediment, or soil — capable of storing and transmitting water in quantities sufficient to supply a well or spring. The word matters less than the mechanics: it is essentially a slow-moving underground reservoir, though calling it a reservoir implies stillness that is only partly accurate.
Aquifers sit below the water table, which marks the upper boundary of the saturated zone. Above that line lies the unsaturated (vadose) zone, where pore spaces in soil and rock hold a mixture of air and water. Below it, pressure builds. The hydrology and water cycle processes that feed aquifers — precipitation infiltration, snowmelt, and riverbed seepage — operate at the surface but ultimately determine what happens hundreds of feet underground.
Aquifer extent varies considerably. The High Plains Aquifer (also called the Ogallala) underlies approximately 174,000 square miles across eight states (USGS High Plains Water-Level Monitoring Study), making it one of the largest groundwater systems in the world. Local aquifers, by contrast, may supply a single rural county and measure only a few square miles.
How it works
Water reaches an aquifer through recharge zones — areas where permeable surface materials allow precipitation or surface water to percolate downward through the unsaturated zone. Once past the water table, that water joins the saturated zone and begins moving, usually very slowly, toward discharge points like springs, streams, or pumped wells.
Two fundamental aquifer types behave quite differently:
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Unconfined aquifers sit directly below the water table with no impermeable layer separating them from the surface. Recharge occurs relatively easily across broad areas, but contamination pathways are short. Shallow domestic wells most often draw from unconfined aquifers.
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Confined aquifers (artesian aquifers) are sandwiched between two impermeable layers — typically clay or dense rock called aquitards. Water in confined aquifers is often under pressure. When a well penetrates the confining layer, that pressure can push water upward without pumping; in classic artesian conditions, it flows freely at the surface. The Dakota Aquifer, which supplied flowing wells across the Dakotas and Minnesota throughout the late 19th century, is a well-documented historical example.
Flow rates inside aquifers depend on hydraulic conductivity — essentially how easily water moves through the material. Coarse gravel may transmit water at several feet per day. Dense fractured granite might move water only inches per year. The U.S. Geological Survey uses a value called transmissivity (hydraulic conductivity multiplied by saturated thickness) to characterize how much water a given aquifer segment can yield to a well.
The earth science conceptual framework on this site covers how scientific models like these translate field measurements into quantified predictions — a process especially visible in groundwater modeling, where instruments measure what human eyes cannot reach.
Common scenarios
Groundwater science plays out in recognizable patterns across the US landscape:
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Agricultural overdraft: In the southern High Plains, water levels in the Ogallala Aquifer have declined more than 150 feet in some areas since widespread irrigation began in the mid-20th century (USGS High Plains Aquifer Groundwater-Level Changes). Because recharge rates in that region measure in fractions of an inch per year, pumping at current agricultural scale is functionally non-renewable on human timescales.
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Saltwater intrusion: Coastal aquifers face a specific threat when freshwater pressure drops — seawater migrates inland through the same porous formations. Miami-Dade County, Florida, manages saltwater intrusion into the Biscayne Aquifer as an active infrastructure challenge, using injection wells and recharge basins to maintain the freshwater-saltwater boundary (South Florida Water Management District).
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Land subsidence: Heavy pumping can compact aquifer sediments permanently. The San Joaquin Valley in California subsided more than 28 feet in some locations during the 20th century, primarily from groundwater extraction (USGS Land Subsidence in the United States).
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Spring-fed ecosystems: Discharge zones create unique habitat. Florida's first-magnitude springs — those discharging at least 64.6 cubic feet per second — support ecosystems entirely dependent on stable groundwater temperature and chemistry (Florida Department of Environmental Protection, Florida Springs).
Decision boundaries
Not every underground water source qualifies as a productive aquifer. Geologists and hydrogeologists draw distinctions that affect drilling decisions and regulatory classification:
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Aquifer vs. aquitard: An aquitard restricts but does not completely prevent flow. An aquiclude stops it entirely. A clay layer 10 feet thick might slow recharge to an underlying confined aquifer without blocking it; a massive granite intrusion creates a true barrier.
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Potable vs. non-potable groundwater: Total dissolved solids (TDS) exceeding 1,000 milligrams per liter — the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's secondary standard threshold (EPA Secondary Drinking Water Standards) — typically renders groundwater unsuitable for drinking without treatment, even if the formation holds substantial volume.
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Sustainable yield: The rate at which an aquifer can be pumped without long-term decline defines its practical limit. This calculation integrates recharge rate, storage volume, and surrounding land use — and it shifts as climate patterns alter precipitation distribution. The earth science resources index connects these hydrologic topics to the broader geologic and atmospheric systems that determine recharge.