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Aquifer
WRITTEN
BY:The Editors of
Encyclopaedia Britannica
Aquifer, in hydrology, rock layer
that contains water and releases it in appreciable amounts.
The rock contains water-filled pore spaces,
and, when the spaces are connected, the water is able to flow through the
matrix of the rock.
An aquifer also may be called a
water-bearing stratum, lens, or zone.
A confined aquifer is a water-bearing
stratum that is confined or overlain by a rock layer that does not transmit
water in any appreciable amount or that is impermeable.
There probably are few truly confined
aquifers, because tests have shown that the confining strata, or layers,
although they do not readily transmit water, over a period of time contribute
large quantities of water by slow leakage to supplement production from the
principal aquifer.
A groundwater aquifer is said to be
unconfined when its upper surface (water table) is open to the atmosphere through
permeable material.
As opposed to a confined aquifer, the water
table in an unconfined aquifer system has no overlying impervious rock
layer to separate it from the atmosphere.
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