Subregional‐scale groundwater depletion detected by GRACE for both shallow and deep aquifers in North China Plain
Citations Over TimeTop 1% of 2015 papers
Abstract
Abstract This study explores the capability of Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) to detect heterogeneous groundwater storage (GWS) variations in two subregions of the North China Plain: the Piedmont Plain (PP, ~54,000 km 2 , mainly exploiting shallow groundwater) and East Central Plain (ECP, ~86,000 km 2 , mainly exploiting deep groundwater). Results show that the GWS anomalies estimated from GRACE data (2003–2013) agree well with those estimated from in situ observations (2005–2010) for both PP ( R 2 = 0.91) and ECP ( R 2 = 0.75). The shallow GWS (2003–2013) in PP declines faster (−46.5 ± 6.8 mm/yr) than the deep GWS in ECP (−16.9 ± 1.9 mm/yr). However, the shallow GWS in PP recovered more quickly especially during the 2008–2011 drought period. Despite its lower magnitude, the GRACE‐derived GWS depletion in ECP reveals the overexploitation of deep GWS. This study demonstrated that the heterogeneous GWS variations can potentially be detected by GRACE at the subregional scale smaller than the typical GRACE footprint (200,000 km 2 ).
Related Papers
- → Decline of groundwater table and evolution of groundwater-overdraft regions in Linqing city(2020)1 cited
- → The Commons and the State: Regulating Overexploitation(1994)
- → Comprehensive evaluation of the effect of regional groundwater overexploitation restoration(2023)
- → Overexploitation(2019)
- → Overexploitation of Renewables Abound: Modeling for Fisheries Management(2014)