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L.A. moves, but not in the way expected.


Researchers monitoring small ground motions along faults in Southern California Southern California, also colloquially known as SoCal, is the southern portion of the U.S. state of California. Centered on the cities of Los Angeles and San Diego, Southern California is home to nearly 24 million people and is the nation's second most populated region,  ended up detecting an altogether different phenomenon: the rise and fall of the ground as local governments pump billions of gallons of water into and out of the region's aquifers.

In some spots--particularly in the 40kilometer-long Santa Ana Santa Ana, city, El Salvador
Santa Ana (sän'tä ä`nä), city (1993 pop. 129,873), W El Salvador. It is the second largest city in the country and the commercial and processing center for a sugarcane, coffee, and cattle region.
 basin, southeast of Los Angeles--the ground rises and falls Rise and Fall redirects here. For the Belgian hardcore band, click here.

Rises and falls is a category of the ballroom dance technique that refers to rises and falls of the body of a dancer achieved through actions of knees and feet (ankles).
 up to 11 centimeters over the course of a year. This periodic movement, which the scientists say isn't linked to Southern California's earthquake activity, hasn't been measured before, says Gerald W. Bawden, a geophysicist at the U.S. Geological Survey in Menlo Park, Calif. Satellite-mounted instruments and a ground network of Global Positioning System Global Positioning System: see navigation satellite.
Global Positioning System (GPS)

Precise satellite-based navigation and location system originally developed for U.S. military use.
 (GPS) stations detected the rhythmic motion, which Bawden likens to breathing, during the past 6 years. He and his colleagues report their findings in the Aug. 23 NATURE.

More than 14 million people live in the metropolitan Los Angeles area. Add in all the golf courses, car washes, and industrial activity of a large city and you've got a recipe requiring a lot of water. Throughout the year, utility districts in the region pump rainwater, as well as water diverted from the Colorado River and sources in northern California, into aquifers.

When demand for water is low, the underground reservoirs recharge and swell like a wet sponge, says Bawden. In the summer months, the net withdrawal of water from these aquifers causes the overlying overlying

suffocation of piglets by the sow. The piglets may be weak from illness or malnutrition, the sow may be clumsy or ill, the pen may be inadequate in size or poorly designed so that piglets cannot escape.
 ground to compact and subside. Because the ground doesn't fully spring back when it's recharged with water, parts of the Santa Ana basin lose 12 millimeters, or about a finger's width, in altitude per year.

Natural settling in the area would typically amount to less than 1 mm per year, says Thomas K. Rockwell, a geologist at San Diego State University San Diego State University (SDSU), founded in 1897 as San Diego Normal School, is the largest and oldest higher education facility in the greater San Diego area (generally the City and County of San Diego), and is part of the California State University system. . However, exploitation of the region's water, oil, and natural gas has caused some sites to drop as much as 9 meters, or 9,000 times normal, in the past century, he adds.

Horizontal ground movements at locations with little or no vertical change show that the southwestern portions of the Los Angeles basin The Los Angeles Basin is the coastal sediment-filled plain located between the peninsular and transverse ranges in southern California in the United States containing the central part of the city of Los Angeles as well as its southern and southeastern suburbs (both in Los Angeles  are creeping about 4.4 mm each year toward the mountains in the northeast, Bawden notes. However, areas that experienced large vertical motions due to the extraction and recharge of water in aquifers showed horizontal movements of up to 14 mm during the course of a year.

Minster hails the new measurement of the direction and size of tectonic ground movement in the Los Angeles basin as "a major step forward in assessing the seismic hazards" of Southern California.

"When scientists set out to measure small quantities like ground motion, they often find unexpected phenomena like this," says Bernard Minster, a geophysicist at the University of California, San Diego UCSD is consistently ranked among the top ten public universities for undergraduate education in the United States by U.S. News & World Report.[3] It is a Public Ivy. [1] For graduate studies, most of UCSD's Ph.D. .
COPYRIGHT 2001 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:how aquifer volume affects ground movement in Los Angeles, California
Author:Perkins, S.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1U9CA
Date:Aug 25, 2001
Words:458
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