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Sunday, March 22, 2026

Ground water and it's shortages

 Groundwater depletion : The most critical scientific and political challenge   

 

As the world’s largest perennial and distributed freshwater resource, groundwater will play a central role in one of the most critical scientific and political challenges of this century: improving human access to fresh water for the production of food and safe drinking water while sustaining key ecosystems in a warming world. Groundwater is critical to irrigated agriculture and domestic water access. Unfortunately, unsustainable pumping is depleting groundwater reserves at rapid and accelerating rates, especially in cultivated dry lands. This groundwater depletion poses a challenge to global urbanization and may represent the world’s greatest threat to irrigated agriculture. Depletion trends can be reversed by human interventions, but the interventions which have refilled depleted aquifers have not been compiled and compared. For half the world's population, the water in their drinking glasses comes from below them. Groundwater also supplies 40% of global irrigation projects. Alarmingly, more than a third of the planet's aquifers, or groundwater basins, are dropping. Declining water tables leave entire regions vulnerable to drought, land subsidence or seawater intrusion while damaging ecosystems and reducing water access. Properly securing this resource is a matter of social, humanitarian and environmental security.

Fortunately, there have been some success stories. UC Santa Barbara professor Scott Jasechko dove into the details of 67 cases of aquifer recovery in a study. He found that most successful initiatives incorporated multiple intervention categories, and over 80% involved sourcing an alternative water supply. It provides many insights on the strategies which communities and resource managers can use to address declining groundwater resources. "The cases in this review are a reminder that groundwater depletion is not inevitable," said Jasechko, a professor at the Bren School of Environmental Science & Management. "They highlight how humans have solved this problem in different places around the globe." For example, By selecting several interventions from a menu of strategies, Beijing was able to reverse their declining groundwater. Groundwater is being depleted, often at rapid and unsustainable rates, in regions across the globe as agricultural, domestic, and industrial demands continue to grow. Is such groundwater loss inevitable? Jasechko reviews an array of examples that demonstrate that it is not and that well-designed human intervention can slow, stop, or even reverse depletion trends. Knowing which methods are effective in countering groundwater depletion could facilitate additional efforts to fight it, thereby mitigating land surface subsidence, water table deepening, reductions in crop yields, and seawater contamination of coastal aquifers.

In 2024, Jasechko and his colleagues compiled the largest assessment of groundwater levels around the world, spanning nearly 1,700 aquifers. They presented a picture of dwindling resources and accelerating declines. But it also offered a few instructive examples of where things were going well, which served as the basis for the current study. Jasechko pored over these success stories, arranging interventions into categories which he could then sort and compare. Three broad recovery strategies emerged: finding alternative water sources, implementing policies and environmental markets, and artificially replenishing aquifers. Aquifers are like groundwater bank accounts replenished by deposits from rain, snowmelt and surface infiltration. Right now, there are a lot of dangerously low balances. We can address these by changing our lifestyle and consumption; in other words, enacting policies and creating infrastructure to reduce the demand on groundwater. We can also get a side hustle. Alternative water sources can offset groundwater demand or even be deposited back into our account through aquifer recharge. The current paper has a lot of nuanced comparisons and discussions since each case study has a unique combination of factors. However, several trends appeared. Two-thirds of the cases involved interventions from multiple categories. "I think this emphasizes the value of multi-pronged strategies to address groundwater level declines," Jasechko said. The moral here is don't put all your eggs in one basket. Or in this case, don't carry all your water in one bucket. Meanwhile, 81% included an alternative water source that helped offset groundwater demands. Jasechko suspects part of this strategy's appeal is that it requires the least behavioral change. "If another water source is available, accessing it can help meet water demands and offset the need to pump groundwater," he said. "This can sidestep more challenging conversations about reducing total water use, but accessing alternative supplies can have its own drawbacks." Specifically, this solution is often expensive and can end up displacing the issue to another location. In contrast, policy changes benefit from low overhead and energy costs. They also most directly target the behaviors that led to drawdown in the first place. However, they often have major impacts on local economies that have relied on groundwater use for a long time. Groundwater recharge can obviate the need to reduce pumping, "which can be a viable strategy for communities that have built their economies around groundwater use," Jasechko remarked. But, again, the water needs to come from somewhere, and getting it into the aquifer requires energy.

Interventions which have reversed groundwater depletion trends include changes to policies, use of alternative water supplies and the artificial replenishment of aquifers. Jasechko acknowledges that this is not a comprehensive analysis, or even a correlative study. It only considers places previously studied by other scientists and resource managers. "It likely overrepresents places where groundwater science has been published in English-language academic journals," he said. It also doesn't start with actions and follows them to their effects. "We need a database of all the places where comparable interventions were implemented, and the groundwater levels before and after," Jasechko said. This is actually a goal that his longtime collaborator, UCSB professor Debra Perrone, is working toward. This all means there's no guarantee that the solutions detailed here will work at other places. At the very least, they will need to be adapted to local conditions. But Jasechko still sees value in outlining the success stories. "This study can help create a menu of options for managers and stakeholders to consider as they develop locally relevant strategies to try to make things better," he said. These examples and analysis, he believes, can provide the activation energy to begin addressing this problem more widely. "Groundwater depletion is widespread globally. These cases highlight that there are ways to turn things around," Jasechko said. "Globally, there are many more bad news cases than good news cases. Yet, I am somewhat encouraged by the clever ways that certain managers and stakeholders have addressed the problem of groundwater depletion in specific places, because they show that the menu of strategies is longer than I originally anticipated."

Refilling depleted aquifers can have cobenefits such as halting land subsidence, slowing seawater intrusion, reducing drought vulnerability, restoring ecosystems and improving water access. However, new challenges can emerge when groundwater rises to very shallow depths, such as waterlogged soils, destabilized buildings, increased liquefaction risks and intensified flood hazards. Together, groundwater recovery cases highlight the benefits of intervening to stop groundwater depletion while also cautioning against overcorrections that risk overfilling aquifers. Scientifically, greater pan‑disciplinary study of interventions designed to halt groundwater declines can help identify transferable tactics to address groundwater depletion. Strategically, stakeholders and managers can consider borrowing and implementing components of the strategies reviewed, which have proven to be successful in one or more cases, thereby enabling successful strategies of the past to empower ongoing efforts to combat groundwater depletion. Beijing provides a great illustration of how combining different strategies can tackle even a megacity's water woes. Between 1950 and 2000, groundwater pumping around Beijing had caused the water table to plummet by more than 20 meters in some places. In 2003, the government started construction of canals and pumping stations, and by 2015 it was delivering water to the city and surrounding areas from wetter regions farther to the south. At the same time, the city began using more reclaimed water in the 21st century, with much of this allocated to environmental uses like watering trees and grasslands as well as replenishing lakes and rivers. Furthermore, the authorities banned pumping from the region's deep confined aquifers for industrial uses after the water deliveries began. Both the area's shallow and deep aquifer has begun to recover, and land subsidence rates have slowed down in and around Beijing. Springs which had previously dried up have begun flowing once again. Meanwhile, the region's irrigated agriculture remains highly productive and its sustainability is no longer jeopardized by falling groundwater levels.

Recent work has highlighted that groundwater depletion is not an inevitability and interventions can slow, stop and even reverse depletion trends. This work profiles dozens of cases of groundwater recovery, where groundwater levels rose after a prolonged period of decline. These cases span a wide range of climate and land-use conditions and highlight how groundwater recovery can take place in both urban and rural areas and in both wet and dry climates. The interventions which drive groundwater recovery span three general categories. First, most groundwater recovery cases involve access to an alternative water source to offset groundwater demands. These alternative water sources usually involve diversions of rivers, highlighting the critical importance of coordinating surface-water and groundwater management. Because such diversions reduce river discharges, some groundwater recovery episodes have exacerbated water scarcity elsewhere. Second, about half of the cases involve changes to policies or market conditions which reduced groundwater demands, such as the implementation and enforcement of groundwater withdrawal fees or restrictions on pumping. Third, many cases of groundwater recovery involve artificial groundwater recharge. This artificial recharge can be deliberate (e.g., diverting river water into intentionally leaky ponds) or incidental (e.g., leaky irrigation canals). Altogether, many cases of groundwater recovery involve coincident implementation of multiple interventions, demonstrating the merits of multipronged strategies to reverse groundwater declines. "However, just because groundwater is recovering at any given moment in time doesn't mean that the work is done," Jasechko warns. In 1957, Green Bay, Wisconsin constructed a 43-km pipeline to augment their groundwater supply with water from Lake Michigan. This helped restore their stressed aquifer for a while, before additional demand sent it falling again for decades. In 2006, the city built another, 100 km-long  pipeline to bring in more water from the Great Lakes, which has brought their aquifer back on the path to recovery. "It's important to keep monitoring after an initial phase of groundwater recovery so that managers can adapt to changing conditions," Jasechko said.

Groundwater depletion poses a challenge to irrigated agriculture and water access. Depleted aquifers can be refilled, but the interventions which have successfully refilled depleted aquifers are rarely reviewed. This work reviews cases of groundwater recovery, where groundwater levels rose after a prolonged period of decline. The interventions which spurred groundwater recovery included policy changes, artificial groundwater recharge and increased reliance on another water source instead of groundwater. Groundwater recovery can improve water access, restore ecosystems, slow seawater intrusion and halt land subsidence. However, excessive groundwater recovery can waterlog soils, destabilize buildings, increase liquefaction risks and intensify flood hazards. Stakeholders and managers may consider adapting aspects of these interventions to address groundwater depletion elsewhere. At the moment, Jasechko is investigating why recovery speed and distribution can vary so widely across different basins. And these case studies will help develop better predictions of how quickly groundwater levels may recover under different interventions. "An important question is: What scope and scale of intervention is required for depleted aquifers to start recovering?" he said. These are important questions for communities and resource managers who would like to improve the situation, but just don't have a sense as to what magnitude of intervention is required. Jasechko summarized his findings in following key themes:-

Most success stories involved multiple kinds of interventions.

The majority included accessing alternative water sources.

Interventions that reduced pumping often helped aquifers recover.

Good policies still require sound implementation and enforcement.

Sometimes recovery can happen over just a few years.

When recovery is slow, gradual policy phase-in can be helpful.

Recovery can vary widely within a given area.

Improvements aren't permanent, and can easily reverse.

It's important to manage groundwater quality alongside quantity.

Interventions should consider the direct and indirect impacts of climate change.




Muhammad (Peace be upon him) Name

 















ALLAH Names

 















Friday, March 20, 2026

Titan with liquid on its surface and a thick atmosphere

  A moon with familiar vistas : Rainfall, rivers and seas

How can two worlds, so fundamentally different in temperature and composition, possibly be so alike? Titan is both the only other place in the Solar System with liquid on its surface and the only moon with a thick atmosphere, making it a tantalizing destination to search for life. Its rivers and lakes are made mostly of methane, and water plays the role of bedrock. Titan is Saturn’s largest moon, nearly the size of Mars, but it’s more than just a moon, it is a laboratory for life unlike anything we see on Earth. In a strange way, Titan may be the most Earth-like world out there. It is the only other place we know of that has liquid on its surface, but in Titan’s case the liquid is mostly methane, which fills up seas, flows in rivers and even rains down from the sky. It’s so cold there that the mountains and valleys are sculpted from water ice as hard as stone. NASA’s Dragonfly mission, consisting of a small rotorcraft, is planned to launch in 2027 to explore Titan. But if humans were to journey to Titan, we wouldn’t need the bulky pressure suits which astronauts wear for spacewalks. That’s because, despite the moon’s weak gravity, the atmospheric pressure near its surface is about 60% higher than on Earth, it is the only moon in the Solar System with a substantial atmosphere. The atmosphere is mostly made of nitrogen with a small amount of methane, but near the top of the atmosphere, high-energy particles and radiation from the sun split these atoms apart. Their constituent parts react with one another to form a thick orange haze.   

  

What if I say that our very own Earth holds a secret, a cosmic clue to understanding one of the most enigmatic worlds in our solar system? It sounds wild. But imagine a place far, far away, shrouded in a thick, nitrogen-rich haze, where methane rains down and carves out rivers, lakes and seas. No, it's not describing some alien fantasy novel, it's about Titan, Saturn's largest moon, which happens to share some truly remarkable geophysical and geological processes with our home planet. It's like finding a long-lost cousin who somehow ended up living in a completely different neighborhood, but still has all the same quirky habits. But how can two worlds, so fundamentally different in temperature and composition, possibly be so alike? That's the cosmic puzzle we're trying to solve. This newfound appreciation for Earth's 'Titan-like' spots is absolutely critical for the future of space exploration, especially for missions like NASA's upcoming Dragonfly. This amazing rotorcraft lander, set to touch down on Titan in 2036, is designed to hop around and investigate the moon's prebiotic chemistry, habitability, and even search for potential chemical biosignatures. Dragonfly has a specific traverse target: the 50-mile-wide (80 km's) Selk Crater, a place where scientists hope to find evidence of liquid water mixing with surface organics.

Carbon-rich compounds called tholins snow down from the haze onto the moon’s surface, building up huge dune fields in the flatlands. These tholins could be the building blocks of life, if it is possible to base life on liquid methane and ethane instead of water. If there is any liquid water on Titan, it must be buried deep beneath the frigid surface, hidden in impact craters, or erupted by strange, icy volcanoes. Because the primary surface liquid there is methane, one might expect any life which evolved there to be methane-based just as Earth life is water-based. Titan is a frozen world, colder than anything we see on Earth, with a crust of ice and organics, not rock. How could anything here possibly tell us about that place? And you wouldn't be wrong to be skeptical. For a long time, there's been a perfectly reasonable hesitation in the scientific community about whether we could actually find useful Earth analogs for a world so distinct in its temperature and material makeup. It's like trying to compare a popsicle to a planet. But here's where the story gets really interesting, and where the cleverness of researchers shines. See, even with those big differences, a team of scientists has been looking at our own world with fresh eyes. Their insight: there's actually a much wider range of analog fieldwork possible right here on Earth than we ever bothered to consider.

It’s not clear that Titan could host any living organisms, but the liquid on its surface makes it one of the most promising places in the Solar System to look. If there are signs of life there, it could be the key to understanding what ingredients are necessary for life to evolve and how it arose on Earth. It could tell us whether we should expect any life we find anywhere in the cosmos to be Earth-like, or we should discard all expectations and be open to the possibility of life vastly different from anything we’ve seen before. Field analog research, in its simplest form, is all about poking around natural sites on Earth that mimic environments or processes we see on other planets. It's a way to test our gear, prove our instruments, and gather vital data on how things work in extreme environments before we send expensive spacecraft zipping across the solar system. And what they've found is pretty astounding.  Titan was made from images acquired by NASA's Cassini spacecraft on 12 Jan, 2013. During this period a large ice cloud system had formed over the moon's south pole. Titan, with its thick nitrogen atmosphere and methane acting as a condensible gas, drives an active meteorology which leads to rainfall and surface features like rivers, lakes and even seas. Sound familiar? It should. We see the echoes of these same dynamic processes on Earth.

Titan’s thick atmosphere makes it extraordinarily difficult to study from afar. To most of our telescopes, it looks like a fuzzy orange ball. Before we sent the first spacecraft to study Titan up close, that opaque haze led many astronomers to believe it was the largest moon in the Solar System, a title actually held by Jupiter’s moon Ganymede. The first three missions to visit, Pioneer 11, and Voyager 1 and 2, could not penetrate the haze, leaving Titan’s surface a mystery. Infrared light could pierce the atmosphere, so some images from the Hubble Space Telescope revealed vague areas which were brighter or darker than others, but it wasn’t entirely clear what those areas were until the Cassini mission. Imagine a world where entire landscapes are shaped by the flow of liquids, where shorelines emerge and recede, and geological features like karstic terrain, the kind we see carved by water on Earth, are instead sculpted by hydrocarbons. These Earth-Titan parallels aren't just neat coincidences; they're direct insights into how complex planetary surfaces evolve, giving us a secret laboratory right under our feet. The Cassini mission orbited Saturn from 2004 to 2017, and in that time it gave us nearly all of the information we have about Titan. It had infrared and radar instruments which allowed planetary scientists to see all the way to the huge moon’s surface during 127 flybys, and it also carried the Huygens probe. Cassini dropped Huygens through the haze to Titan’s surface, where it made the most distant spacecraft landing ever. It took valuable atmospheric data as it fell, and sent back pictures from Titan’s surface once it landed.

And that's where our terrestrial analogs come in. They serve as indispensable tools for 'ground-truthing' the astrobiological studies, allowing us to test our theories and refine our instruments here at home before they get to work billions of miles away. Our Earth-based detective work will greatly enhance our ability to understand the datasets Dragonfly sends back. The universe is full of surprises, and sometimes, the answers to our biggest questions about distant worlds are waiting for us right here on Earth. The journey to understand Titan, to uncover its secrets and assess its potential for life, is a continuous one. It's a grand scientific endeavor, driven by curiosity and cleverness, and it reminds us that every piece of knowledge we gain, whether from a field site on Earth or a rotorcraft soaring over an alien landscape, adds another brushstroke to the breathtaking canvas of cosmic discovery. Now that we know about Titan’s methane seas and chemically complex atmosphere, NASA is preparing to take the exploration of this strange moon one step further with the Dragonfly mission, scheduled to launch in 2027. Dragonfly is a small drone designed to cover more ground than a traditional lander or rover by making short flights around Titan’s surface. Its main goals are to figure out whether Titan is, or ever has been, habitable, look for complex chemistry, and even check if there are signs that this hazy world has actually hosted life. And there's always, always, more to explore in the universe.

Titan Facts Obtained up till now

Surface temperature: -179 degrees Celsius (-290 degrees Fahrenheit)

Average distance from Sun: 9.5 AU

Diameter: 5,149 km's (3,200 miles)

Atmosphere: Very thick and hazy; mostly nitrogen with a small amount of methane

Gravity: 1.35 m/s2

Volume: 71.6 billion cubic km's (17.2 billion cubic miles), Earth’s moon could fit inside Titan about 3.3 times

Solar day: 382 Earth hours

Solar year: 29 Earth years









Ground water and it's shortages

  Groundwater depletion : The most critical scientific and political challenge       As the world’s largest perennial and distributed fresh...