Of these, 21 have exceeded sustainability tipping points and are being depleted, with 13 considered significantly distressed,
threatening regional
water security and resilience.
One-third of Earth's largest groundwater basins are under threat because humans are draining so much water from them, according to two new studies (Quantifying Renewable Groundwater Stress with GRACE and Uncertainty in Global Groundwater Storage Estimates in a Total Groundwater Stress Framework).
What's more, researchers say they lack accurate data about how much water remains in these dwindling reservoirs. The studies found that eight of the world's 37 biggest aquifers are "overstressed," meaning not enough water is replenished to offset the usage.
Topping the list of overstressed aquifers is the Arabian Aquifer System, located beneath Yemen and Saudi Arabia, from which 60 million people draw their water.
The extension of the outcrop areas of principle and secondary aquifers in Saudi Arabia
The researchers used data from NASA's Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) satellites, twin probes that make precise measurements of changes in Earth's gravity.
These gravity perturbations are influenced by changes in mass on the planet, driven by how much water has been lost.
The studies used data collected between 2003 and 2013. In addition to the Arabian Aquifer System, the most taxed aquifers are located in the world's driest regions, the researchers found.
For instance, the Indus Basin aquifer, which straddles northwestern India and Pakistan, was labeled the second-most overstressed in the world, and northern Africa's Murzuq-Diado Basin rounded out the top three.
Groundwater pumping in California's Central Valley is also rapidly depleting the state's vast aquifer system, the researchers said. This over-pumping is exacerbated by the extreme drought in California, which is now in its fourth year.
Currently, 99 percent of California is experiencing drought conditions, and 47 percent of the state is considered to be in "exceptional drought," according to the U.S. Drought Monitor.
The results of the second study were just as alarming, with researchers finding that there is little information available on how much groundwater is left in the world's largest basins.
In some cases, existing estimates were based on information from decades ago, the researchers said. Adding in the GRACE measurements caused large fluctuations in the estimates.
For example, the "time to depletion" for the Northwest Sahara Aquifer System was estimated at anywhere between 10 and 21,000 years, the researchers said.
To access groundwater reservoirs, it is often necessary to dig through rock layers far below the Earth's surface.
In addition, drillers often don't know how deep the reservoir reaches until they dig far enough to see where the moisture is no longer available.
But with the world's usable groundwater disappearing faster than it is being replenished, it is crucial to pinpoint how much water remains in the planet's aquifer systems, the researchers said.
Both papers were published online June 16 in Water Resources Research, a journal of the American Geophysical Union:
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