WHAT IS GROUND WATER?

Ground water is water that fills all openings in earth materials in the zone of permanent saturation. The top of the zone of saturation is called the water table. The source of ground water is precipitation (rain and snow) that seeps into the soil and percolates downward. Below the water table, ground water moves slowly toward places of discharge such as springs, lakes, rivers, marshes, and wells. Water falls to the ground, moves through the rocks, returns to the surface, and finally gets back to the atmosphere by evaporation and from plants ([fig. 19]). This cycle is continuously repeated.