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13 votes
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Scientists find oceans of water on Mars. It's just too deep to tap.
59 votes -
Forest Service orders Arrowhead bottled water company to shut down California pipeline
53 votes -
A melting Alaska glacier keeps inundating Juneau
19 votes -
Hidden water reserve twice the size of Loch Ness discovered in drought-stricken Sicily
10 votes -
Anger mounts over environmental cost of Google datacentre in Uruguay
19 votes -
Generative AI requires massive amounts of power and water, and the aging US grid can't handle the load
27 votes -
Engineers develop a recipe for zero-emissions fuel: soda cans (aluminium), seawater and caffeine
34 votes -
The underwater 'kites' generating electricity as they move beneath the waters of the Faroe Islands in the North Atlantic
11 votes -
Ecuador river is granted the right to not be polluted in historic court case
16 votes -
With CO2 levels rising, world’s drylands are turning green
9 votes -
Ecuador court rules pollution violates rights of a river running through capital
24 votes -
Hay grown for cattle consumes nearly half the water drawn from Colorado River, study finds
23 votes -
US Supreme Court rejects states agreement over Rio grande water distribution
16 votes -
Water is bursting from another abandoned West Texas oil well, continuing a troubling trend
13 votes -
Deaths mount and water rationed as India faces record heat
43 votes -
Indigenous nations approve historic water rights agreement with state of Arizona. It now goes to US Congress.
17 votes -
Mexico City and Bogotá stare down a ‘Day Zero’ without water
25 votes -
Los Angeles County captures ninety-six billion gallons of water during ‘super year’ of storms
14 votes -
Alaskan rivers are turning orange
14 votes -
A major initiative to scale up water chlorination in India
4 votes -
I am a witch. Well, a well witcher...
The well on our acreage has stopped producing much. It may come back after some rehabilitation but in the mean time I called out a local water expert and well repair tech to look at it. He said it...
The well on our acreage has stopped producing much. It may come back after some rehabilitation but in the mean time I called out a local water expert and well repair tech to look at it.
He said it might be necessary to drill a deeper well. Then he pulled out two rods, bent at a 90 degree angle and held them loosely in his grip, letting the ends point forward and still able to move freely. He started walking, criss crossing our yard til at one point the two rods turned inward to point toward each other. He dug his heel in to mark the spot and moved on to find at least 5 other spots on the yard where there is water underground. This is well witching. And its been used for years to find underground water.
Dont ask me how it works. I have no clue. But he asked if I wanted to try it, so I did. Held the rods loosely and walked and sure enough, over a certain point they swung together. I was looking at them but very consciously not moving my hands or trying to manipulate them in any way. The rods were only about 1/8" thick and I wasnt gripping them tightly so it would have been impossible to make them turn. Did my hands turn in ever so slightly? Not that I could tell. I turned around and walked back over the spot and sure enough, the rods turned in at the same spot.
Its a weird phenomenon. Have no idea why it works but it does work. I've seen witching used at a friends house with a very long pole held in one hand that would dip down when the witcher walked over the water, and it produced a successful high flow well. This guy even said he could find gas lines using the same technique.
Can't wait til the wife gets home and I let her know she married a witch. lol
35 votes -
Revealed: Tyson Foods dumps millions of pounds of toxic pollutants into US rivers and lakes
43 votes -
What your next water heater will look like
27 votes -
Mexico water wars: Farmers take over avocado orchards that need too much water
17 votes -
Dozens of Texas water systems exceed new federal PFAS limits
12 votes -
Guangdong’s expected massive river flooding threatens millions after it ‘rained like a waterfall’
16 votes -
California sets nation-leading limit for carcinogenic chromium-6 in drinking water
17 votes -
Joe Biden administration sets first-ever limits on ‘forever chemicals’ in US drinking water
26 votes -
The fish doorbell
17 votes -
How do fish ladders work?
15 votes -
Cattle are drinking the Colorado River dry
27 votes -
Iowa fertilizer spill kills nearly all fish across sixty mile stretch of rivers
47 votes -
Water isn't normal
24 votes -
Oldham in England sees water quality improved by volunteers planting moss
19 votes -
How a solar revolution in farming is depleting world’s groundwater
16 votes -
Taps run dry in water crisis in Bangalore, India. Citizens and large Information Technology companies struggle to cope.
14 votes -
Melt rate of Greenland ice sheet can predict summer weather in Europe – location, extent and strength of recent freshwater events suggest unusually warm and dry summer
14 votes -
Beyond the water flow rate: Water pressure and smart timers impact shower efficiency
12 votes -
By sending Mississippi river waters on a new course, engineers hope to build new land—and test ways to save a retreating coast
10 votes -
Copenhagen is just one city among many around the world taking a novel approach to prevent repeated flooding. It is becoming a sponge.
8 votes -
Chile puts brakes on Google data center over water use, environmental concerns
17 votes -
How Steward Health left Rockledge Regional Medical Center, a Space Coast community hospital, in a literal world of shit
14 votes -
UCLA and Equatic to build world’s largest ocean-based plant for carbon removal
13 votes -
One of the world’s biggest cities may be just months away from running out of water
22 votes -
How the UN is holding back the Sahara desert
8 votes -
The bizarre patterns that emerge when you heat any fluid
11 votes -
A landslide of contaminated soil threatens environmental disaster in Denmark. Who pays to stop it?
19 votes -
The neglected clean heat we flush down the drains
37 votes -
Norway is to allow mining waste to be dumped in its fjords after the government won a court case against environmental organisations trying to block the plan
29 votes