Borewells, open wells and groundwater in Bangalore

Conversations on groundwater recharging and rainwater harvesting tend to assume a knowledge of the meanings of several terms. Here's a quick primer for Bangaloreans.

This is a quick primer by for Bangaloreans on borewells, open wells, recharging, and undergound acquifers.

Bangalore originally used to rely on open wells more than borewells. Open wells get their water from shallow acquifers that lie at depths of less than 80 feet from the ground. Many parts of Bangalore still have open wells.

Bangalore's Geology and Ground Water

Illustration: Sripathy Konada, Biome Environmental Solutions. Click for larger picture.

Borewells are in essence, narrow holes dug deep into the ground. A borewell taps into a deep acquifer, which essentially water in rocks.

Because waters of shallow acquifers are subject to contamination (in part to due to industrialisation) people have been abandoning open wells, and moving to borewells.

To understand how borewells tap ground water, one needs to understand the layers of the earth at the top. Below the top soil is the weathered zone, which is made of rock and behaves like a sponge. This layer changes from area to area. Then comes the bed rock layer. The bed rock is not a monolithic layer; the rocks have cracks and fissures through which water passes and gets accumulated inside the rock. This is a deep acquifer.

Borewells break into the bed rock and taps into the water there. A water diviner’s services are often called for a borewell because the diviner locates a point where you dig a hole to reach a crack and fissure system on the bed rock, several hundred feet below.

What is recharging?

Recharging is process of letting water back into the earth. A recharge well is a big hole through which water goes into the sponge or weathered zone. Recharge wells are dry wells, in the sense that they send water down in one direction, and do not yield water (initially at least) themselves.

Imagine a dry sponge and you are pouring water through a hole into the sponge. The water soaks up the sponge. Sooner or later, the sponge will hit a saturation point. At that point water appears back in the recharge well and it starts yielding. When this happens (all recharge wells have this potential) a recharge well becomes an open well.

Over a much longer period of time, the sponge zone water goes into the bed rock, and in the process trickling down it gets purified. This is why borewell water tends to be purer.

How do shallow acquifers form? There are cases where locally there will be a layer below the open well in the sponge where water from the recharge well does not go into the sponge itself. Instead it builds an underground lake and that becomes the shallow acquifer. The recharge well then starts yielding.

Over a very long time, deep acquifers can get saturated too, and this can build a shallow acquifer above.

As more and more water is continually drawn from the acquifers, yields (for borewells or open wells) tends to fall off over time, unless recharging is being done.(As told to Subramaniam Vincent)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Similar Story

Scorched cities: Documenting the intense Indian summer of 2024 

Here is a round up of how the heat wave has impacted cities across the country and the measures being taken to combat it.

Summer in India has been abnormally hot this year and will continue to be so till June 2024, warns the India Meteorological Department (IMD). As reported by The Wire, in a virtual press conference on April 1st, IMD director general Mrutyunjay Mohapatra said that in the months from April till June, most of India will witness temperatures above normal. IMD's caution comes at a time when the UN’s World Meteorological Organisation also recently warned that 2024 will likely face worse summers after global heat records across the world.  “During the 2024 hot weather season [April to June (AMJ)], above-normal maximum…

Similar Story

The trials of being an urban farmer in Delhi’s Yamuna floodplains

Agriculture around the Yamuna is strictly prohibited due to river pollution concerns, but where does that leave the farmers?

The river Yamuna enters Delhi from a village called Palla and travels for about 48 km. There is a part of the river, approximately 22 km long, between Wazirabad and Okhla, which is severely polluted, but for the remaining 26 km of its course, the river is still fairly clean. The surroundings serve as a habitat for a large number of trees, flowers, farms, birds, and people who have been living here for as long as they can remember. They are the urban farmers of Delhi-NCR, and they provide grains and vegetables for people living in the city. Although farming…