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Land Subsidence, Earth Fissures Change Arizona's Landscape

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The National Institutes for Water Resources
Mostly underground and out of sight, the effects of groundwater over-pumping and declining water tables are difficult for many people to envision, much less conceptualize. The most apparent and tangible manifestation of excessive groundwater pumping seems to be the political and public policy debates the issue provokes. In other words, the most obvious effect of groundwater overdraft in Arizona is the Groundwater Management Act. With the increasing occurrence of land subsidence and resultant earth fissures in certain areas of the state, the consequences of dropping water tables become distinct, physical and sometimes dramatically visible. Land subsidence and fissuring provide tangible evidence that the over withdrawal of groundwater has geological as well as public policy consequences.
Resource type: 
Topical Report
Region & Countries: 
United StatesNorth America
Resource Scale: 
Global

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