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Groundwater Movement

Groundwater recharge

Rain fall and snow melt can run off in streams or soak into the ground  The process of water soaking into the ground  to become groundwater is known as groundwater recharge. The area on the surface where water soaks in is called the recharge area

There are several ways that groundwater might be recharged by rain:

  1. Rain soaks in where it falls and recharges the water table aquifer.
  2. Rain soaks in where it falls and then moves into deep layers to recharge a confined aquifer.
  3. Rain cannot soak in so it runs off into streams. When a stream flows through an area that allows water to soak in, some of the water from the stream may seep down to recharge the aquifer below.

groundwater

Groundwater discharge

Groundwater flows underground until it reaches a discharge zone, an area where the water is above the land surface. Springs are clearly visible discharge zones. Less obvious is the groundwater seeping into wetlands or contributing to stream flows.

If the water table is close to the land surface during the growing season, large amounts of groundwater might be withdrawn by plant roots and released to the air by plants. Evaporation can even discharge groundwater to the air in some areas.

  groundwater

Flow rates

Groundwater moves very slowly from recharge areas to discharge zones. Flow rates in aquifers commonly are measured in feet per day. It might take years, decades, or even centuries for water to flow through some aquifers.

Flow rates are much faster where large openings exist, such as in fractured basalt or coarse gravel. In some cases, water might be underground only a few days or weeks before reaching the discharge zone.

Groundwater & watersheds

Groundwater in a water table aquifer usually moves in the same direction as water flowing over the land surface.  Therefore, it stays in the same watershed where the rain or snow originally fell.  A watershed is the area drained by a single river system.

Confined aquifers, which are much deeper, sometimes are part of a regional groundwater flow system that does not match to the surface drainage.  This allows groundwater to move from one watershed to another.

 

groundwater

 

This section, including most illustrations, was adapted with permission from "What is Groundwater?" by Lyle Raymond, Jr. (© Cornell Cooperative Extension, Cornell University, July 1988).