Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://117.252.14.250:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/6738
Title: A century of groundwater accumulation in Pakistan and northwest India
Authors: MacAllister , D. J.
Krishan, Gopal
Basharat, M.
Cuba, D.
MacDonald, Alan
Keywords: Northwest India
Central Pakistan
Groundwater accumulation
Historical Groundwater trends
Issue Date: 2022
Publisher: Springer Nature
Citation: Nature geoscience
Abstract: The groundwater systems of northwest India and central Pakistan are among the most heavily exploited in the world. However, recent, and well-documented, groundwater depletion has not been historically contextualized. Here, using a long-term observation-well dataset, we present a regional analysis of post-monsoon groundwater levels from 1900 to 2010. We show that human activity in the early twentieth century increased groundwater availability before large-scale exploitation began in the late twentieth century. Net groundwater accumulation in the twentieth century, calculated in areas with sufficient data, was at least 420 km3 at ~3.6 cm yr–1. The development of the region’s vast irrigation canal network, which increased ground water recharge, played a defining role in twentieth-century groundwater accumulation. Between 1970 and 2000, groundwater levels stabilized because of the contrasting effects of above-average rainfall and the onset of tubewell development for irriga tion. Due to a combination of low rainfall and increased tubewell development, approximately 70 km3 of groundwater was lost at ~2.8 cm yr–1 in the first decade of the twenty-first century. Our results demonstrate how human and climatic drivers have combined to drive historical groundwater trends.
URI: http://117.252.14.250:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/6738
Appears in Collections:Research papers in International Journals

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