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Researchers and Farmers Work to Save the Ogallala Aquifer

Center pivot irrigation sprinklers water a wheat field in Finney County. (Photo by David Condos, Kansas News Service)
Center pivot irrigation sprinklers water a wheat field in Finney County. (Photo by David Condos, Kansas News Service)

The amount of water stored under the Great Plains in the Ogallala Aquifer rivals Lake Huron. But it’s drying up. After decades being tapped to irrigate farmland, almost a third of the water under Kansas has disappeared. As David Condos of the Kansas News Service reports, a shift in culture may be the state’s best shot at saving the Ogallala.

 


TAG: The Kansas News Service reports on health, the many factors that influence it and their connection to public policy. Find more at ksnewsservice.org