A reference series for SGMA practitioners

Land Subsidence & Aquifer-System Compaction

One-page technical summaries on the geomechanics of land subsidence caused by groundwater withdrawal — the science behind another of SGMA's six sustainability indicators. A companion to the Streamflow Depletion series, each page stands alone as a printable reference and reads together as a curriculum, from effective stress through critical head, inelastic compaction, and management.

01 — Fundamentals

What Land Subsidence Is, and Where It Happens

Aquifer-system compaction vs. other causes; the classic California case histories (San Joaquin & Santa Clara valleys); permanent storage loss, fissures, and infrastructure damage.

02 — Governing Principle

Effective Stress: Why Pumping Compacts the Ground

Terzaghi's principle σ = σ′ + u, the constant geostatic load, and how lowering head transfers support from pore water to the granular skeleton — with an interactive stress-vs-depth explorer.

03 — Elastic

Elastic (Recoverable) Compaction & Skeletal Storage

Reversible seasonal deformation in the recompression range, elastic skeletal specific storage Sske, and how it connects to the storativity practitioners already use.

04 — Inelastic

Inelastic (Permanent) Compaction Theory

Virgin compression past the historic maximum stress, the e–log σ′ consolidation curve, and why Sskv ≫ Sske makes most subsidence non-recoverable.

05 — Critical Head

Critical Head & Preconsolidation Stress

The threshold that separates recoverable from permanent: how the historic low water level sets the preconsolidation stress, and why each new record low ratchets it down.

06 — Time Delay

Aquitard Drainage & Delayed Compaction

Terzaghi 1-D consolidation in thick clays, Helm's aquitard-drainage model, the time constant τ, and why subsidence keeps accruing for years after heads stabilize.

07 — Parameters

Estimating Parameters from Field Data

Riley's stress–strain method: reading Sske, Sskv, and preconsolidation stress from paired extensometer and water-level records, checked against lab consolidation tests.

08 — Monitoring

Measuring & Monitoring Subsidence

Borehole extensometers, InSAR, continuous GPS, leveling, and compaction recorders — what each method measures, and why they are strongest in combination.

09 — Modeling & Management

Modeling, Consequences & SGMA Management

MODFLOW IBS/SUB/SUB-WT, earth fissures and differential subsidence, and managing to a critical-head target under SGMA minimum thresholds — with a scenario projector.

About this series

Why this matters

Land subsidence is one of the six sustainability indicators under California's Sustainable Groundwater Management Act, and it is unique among them: aquifer-system compaction is largely permanent. When fine-grained interbeds compact inelastically, the lost pore volume — and the groundwater storage it represented — does not come back when water levels recover.

The consequences are concrete and expensive: damaged aqueducts and flood-control channels, earth fissures, collapsed well casings, and a shrinking aquifer. These summaries demystify the underlying geomechanics so that GSAs, stakeholders, and consultants can reason clearly about what drives subsidence, which water-level changes are safe, and how to set defensible thresholds.

How to use

  • Read in order the first time — the theory builds page to page (stress → elastic → inelastic → critical head → time delay).
  • Print pages 04, 05, and 06 for technical design and threshold-setting discussions.
  • Pages 01 and 09 work as stand-alone primers for boards or stakeholder groups.
  • Drag the sliders on the interactive figures to build intuition for parameter sensitivities.
  • Citations on each page point to the primary USGS and academic literature (Poland, Helm, Riley, Sneed, Galloway, and others).