Research news on domestic well water use

Domestic well water use refers to the extraction and utilization of groundwater from privately owned, small-capacity wells for household purposes such as drinking, cooking, bathing, laundry, irrigation of household gardens, and occasionally small-scale livestock watering. Research on this topic emphasizes hydrogeologic context, well construction characteristics, and usage patterns as key determinants of water quantity and quality, including vulnerability to microbial and chemical contaminants. It is central to studies of exposure assessment, risk characterization, and resource sustainability in unregulated or minimally regulated water supplies, and often involves integration of groundwater modeling, water-use surveys, and environmental monitoring to evaluate impacts on aquifer systems and human health.

Challenging California's water 'scarcity' narrative

California doesn't have a water scarcity problem. It has a distribution problem, according to Nícola Ulibarrí, whose new research is reshaping how policymakers think about one of the state's most pressing challenges.

Toxic well water harms dogs before humans, study shows

Dogs drink water wherever they happen to find it—a puddle, a pond, a toilet. But the stuff in their actual water bowls almost always comes from the same tap their owners use. When that water is contaminated, both dogs and ...