Parts of Texas, particularly in Houston and along the Gulf Coast, could be sinking — and the problem will get worse, a new report suggests.
The report published in Science by a collection of international researchers, including researchers from the U.S. Geologic Survey, examined the global threat of subsidence, which is the sinking of land due primarily to groundwater withdrawal for such purposes as drinking water or irrigation.
The analysis estimated the threat of subsidence will grow to affect 1.6 billion people worldwide by 2040. It also found that subsidence most typically occurs in very flat areas made up of alluvial sediments and coastal plains, particularly those in and near densely urban and irrigated areas with high water stress and high groundwater demand. That is, places like Houston and the Gulf Coast.
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