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Updated: April 8, 2024
Wednesday Water Webinars - Recorded
Wednesday Water Webinars - Recorded
Updated: January 3, 2024
Wednesday Water Webinars
Wednesday Water Webinars
Updated: August 10, 2023
Two New Publications to Help You Manage your Woodlands
Two new publications are now available from the University of Maryland Extension and partners to help you manage your woodlands.
Updated: March 13, 2023
Pond and Watershed Management
Prior to digging or re-digging a pond, landowners need to contact their Soil Conservation District or Natural Resources Conservation Service Office to obtain the appropriate permits. In most counties, these offices can offer assistance in pond sitting and design.
Updated: November 21, 2022
Landscapes that Help the Chesapeake Bay - FS 701
Water flowing from the landscape after rain or during irrigation can pick up sediments and nutrients that pollute streams, rivers, and the Chesapeake Bay.
Updated: November 14, 2022
Groundwater
Groundwater
Updated: November 10, 2022
Pond Management Calendar and Record Keeping Log
Pond Management Calendar and Record Keeping Log
Updated: May 17, 2022
Groundwater Protection Begins at Home - Poster
Groundwater Protection Begins at Home - Poster
Updated: May 17, 2022
Ground Water and Wells in the Maryland Piedmont
The Piedmont physiographic province in Maryland is located between the Blue Ridge and Coastal Plain provinces (figure 1). The Piedmont is underlain primarily by metamorphic and igneous crystalline rocks, with smaller amounts of sedimentary rocks. Over time the rocks have been folded, faulted, and fractured to varying degrees, and the region is commonly referred to as fractured-rock terrane (Nutter and Otton, 1969). The boundary between the Piedmont and Coastal Plain provinces is known as the Fall Line, and it separates the hard, fractured rocks of the Piedmont from the unconsolidated sediments of the Coastal Plain.
Updated: May 17, 2022
Ground Water and Wells In the Maryland Coastal Plain
Maryland’s Coastal Plain aquifer system lies within the Atlantic Coastal Plain physiographic province which includes eastern and southern areas of Maryland (figure 1). A relatively thick wedge of largely unconsolidated sediments underlies Maryland's Coastal Plain. The sediments consist predominantly of sand, gravel, silt, and clay, ranging in age from Cretaceous to Quaternary, and overlie consolidated rocks of Precambrian, Lower Paleozoic, Jurassic(?), and Triassic age (Andreasen and others, 2013). The sediments dip gently to the east and southeast with thickness ranging from a few tens of feet near the Fall Line to approximately 7,200 ft at Ocean City, Maryland (figure 2).
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