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aquifer
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   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.

aquifer

A body of rock through which appreciable amounts of water can flow. The rock of an aquifer must be porous and permeable (full of interconnected holes) so that it can conduct water. Aquifers are an important source of fresh water, for example for drinking and irrigation, in many arid areas of the world, and are exploited by the use of artesian wells.

An aquifer may be underlain, overlain, or sandwiched between less permeable layers, called aquicludes or aquitards, which impede water movement. Sandstones and porous limestones make the best aquifers.



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035 mg/l) in comparison to river waters or tanks may possibly be due to low hydraulic conductivity of the top clay/sandy clay sequence, which is regionally behaving as an aquitard.
Having conducted a review of the relevant literature, they report on the "state-of-the-science" of aquitard evaluation relevant to understanding and predicting chemical and microbial transport to underlying aquifers.
 
 
 
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