Connecting The Drops: The Ogallala Aquifer

Most Colorado cities and farms get water from snow melt in the Rockies. Not in Northeastern Colorado. This food producing powerhouse depends on an ancient, underground reservoir called the Ogallala. Ever since the Ice Ages, the Ogallala’s been slowly accumulating water. But modern farmers pump so much, that this “timeless” aquifer is starting to run out. Someday up ahead, Northeast Colorado may have to curtail some crops, and some farm towns might be ghost towns. Shelley Schlender reports as part of our yearlong series Connecting the Drops, in collaboration with the Colorado Foundation for Water Education.

 

  • cover play_arrow

    Connecting The Drops: The Ogallala Aquifer KGNU News

 

Images: Connecting The Drops

 

Picture of KGNU News

KGNU News

Search

Now Playing

play_arrow

Live Broadcast

Recent Stories

Upcoming Events

KGNU PARTNERS

Want to help us build a better radio station?

We’re conducting a survey to help us understand how our listeners are using new technology. Please spend 15 minutes to let us know what you think.

Public media moves forward because you listen, watch, share and support. Thank you for being part of this community — and for helping us continue the journey during Public Media Giving Days.