The chief underground water source for irrigating the agriculture-rich Texas High Plains is depleting at a pace that some fear will exhaust it far more quickly than anticipated. Records examined by the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal show the Ogallala Aquifer has dropped about 325 billion gallons every year for at least the past four decades, meaning the 40-foot decline in the water supply amounts to about a foot each year. The aquifer covers parts of eight states from the Dakotas to Texas, holds almost 3 billion acre-feet of water and could run out in 50 years, according to a Kansas study last year. Read more at The Longview News-Journal…
Recent Posts
TSCRA Talk Episode 52 – Insight from TSCRA President Carl Ray Polk
Carly Ray Polk, TSCRA President, from Lufkin, Texas, joins TSCRA Talk host, Kristen Brown, to …
Continue Reading about TSCRA Talk Episode 52 – Insight from TSCRA President Carl Ray Polk
Crime Watch: Calf missing in Matagorda County
Texas & Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association Special Ranger Brent Mast, District 22 in East …
Continue Reading about Crime Watch: Calf missing in Matagorda County
Crime Watch: Bred heifer missing in Mt. Pleasant
Texas & Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association Special Ranger Bo Fox, District 12 in Northeast …
Continue Reading about Crime Watch: Bred heifer missing in Mt. Pleasant