High resolution US water table depth estimates reveal quantity of accessible groundwater
Yueling Ma, Laura E. Condon, Julian Koch, Andrew Bennett, Amy Defnet, Danielle Tijerina-Kreuzer, Peter Melchior, Reed M. Maxwell | January 14th, 2026
Groundwater is the largest accessible freshwater on Earth, yet its quantity and distribution remain unknown. Here, we develop a high-resolution (approximately 30 m) estimate of water table depth over the continental United States using machine learning that includes uncertainty. We estimate that there is 306,500 km³ (uncertainty range: 291,850–316,720 km³) of groundwater over North America. This represents our highest resolution estimate of accessible freshwater to date, supported by robust statistical performance. We calculate total and accessible groundwater storage, and results show that coarse resolution products are systematically biased in their estimates locally, where decisions are made, as well as at large scales. Our approaches are spatially extensive and locally relevant and thereby bridge a gap between remote sensing and point observations.
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