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water table
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water table

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Springs occur where water-laden rock layers (aquifers) reach the surface. Water will flow from a well whose head is below the water table.

Upper level of groundwater (water collected underground in porous rocks). Water that is above the water table will drain downwards; a spring forms where the water table meets the surface of the ground. The water table rises and falls in response to rainfall and the rate at which water is extracted, for example for irrigation and industry.

In many irrigated areas the water table is falling due to the extraction of water. Below northern China, for example, the water table is sinking at a rate of 1 m/3 ft a year. Regions with a high water table and dense industrialization have problems with pollution of the water table. In the USA, New Jersey, Florida, and Louisiana have water tables that are contaminated by both industrial wastes and saline seepage from the ocean.



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Experts consulted by Los Angeles County, which is one of the defendants, estimate that 140,000 to 170,000 acre-feet a year is pumped annually, which county officials say far exceeds the amount the groundwater table can lose without lowering dramatically.
Neighbors near the quarry - up an unpaved one-lane road off Cedarcroft Road, which feeds onto Bear Creek Road and then onto Cloverdale Road - fear that the 40 round trips per day the quarry intends to run will create noise, dust, traffic hazards, fire danger and also could damage the groundwater table and local wells.
The trees, shrubs and perennials that landscape the rain garden absorb water and allow it to percolate through the soil, replenishing the groundwater table.
 
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