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Lesson 06

Watching the Water

The aquifer isn't static. It breathes — rising in winter, falling in summer, responding to rainfall, pumping, and long-term climate pressure. CAESER and USGS maintain a network of monitoring wells that read this breathing in real time.

Below are real USGS monitoring wells — data pulled live from the National Water Information System. One under a production wellfield, one in the recharge zone, one next to a known breach.

LiveReal-time data from USGS National Water Information System — public domain.
Production wellfieldLIVE USGS

Sh:J-001 — South Memphis (wellfield)

USGS 350002090054400 · Memphis Sand
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One of the longest-running USGS monitoring wells in Shelby County — data back to 1959. Located in South Memphis near MLGW production wellfields. Over 500 measurements spanning 65+ years, most recently February 2026. Shows the aquifer's long-term response to pumping.

Source: USGS NWIS 350002090054400· 0 readings · Public domain
Recharge zoneLIVE USGS

Sh:M-040 — East Shelby County (recharge zone)

USGS 350406089444401 · Memphis Sand
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The most recently measured well in Shelby County (March 2026). Located on the Memphis Sand outcrop/recharge zone east of Memphis, near Collierville. Here the Memphis Sand is close to the surface and directly recharged by rainfall — the water entering the aquifer today.

Source: USGS NWIS 350406089444401· 0 readings · Public domain
Near known breachLIVE USGS

Sh:J-140 — Southwest Memphis (breach-adjacent)

USGS 350124090072200 · Memphis Sand
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USGS well in Southwest Memphis, near the TVA Allen plant and known UCCU breaches. 500+ measurements since 1968, most recently February 2026. This area is where POA was founded in 2017 to fight coal-ash contamination threatening the aquifer.

Source: USGS NWIS 350124090072200· 0 readings · Public domain

For comparison: synthetic demonstration wells

DemoRepresentative values generated to match CAESER/USGS patterns — not live monitoring data.
Production wellfield

Davis Wellfield (South Memphis)

TN157_002372 · Sh:Q-173 · Memphis Sand
Latest DTW
175.7 ft
2026-04
12-mo change
+0.3 ft
Stable

Deep under a major MLGW production wellfield. Water levels drop steadily during summer pumping season, rebound in winter.

1801781751731702024-052024-112025-052025-11DTW (ft)
Recharge zone

Collierville (recharge zone)

TN157_003014 · Sh:R-098 · Memphis Sand
Latest DTW
84.8 ft
2026-04
12-mo change
-0.1 ft
Stable

On the Memphis Sand recharge zone east of Memphis. Shallower water table than production wells; responds to rainfall.

89878583812024-052024-112025-052025-11DTW (ft)
Near known breach

North Memphis (near breach)

TN157_001908 · Sh:P-215 · Memphis Sand
Latest DTW
130.3 ft
2026-04
12-mo change
+0.3 ft
Stable

Adjacent to a known UCCU breach in North Memphis — the CAESER network watches wells like this for signs of contamination from the shallow aquifer above.

1341321301281272024-052024-112025-052025-11DTW (ft)

What to look for

  • Seasonal swing — the ~3–5 ft sine wave you see each year. Wells get deepest in late summer (pumping + no rain) and shallowest in late winter.
  • Long-term trend — if the line is drifting deeper year-over-year, the aquifer is losing water faster than it's recharging at that location.
  • Sudden drops — can signal a new pump coming online nearby, or a drought year. CAESER's network flags these for follow-up.
About this data

The charts above use representative monthly values generated to match the patterns CAESER and USGS see in their live monitoring network. When public real-time CAESER feeds become queryable, this page will swap to streaming data directly from their monitoring network.

For live USGS groundwater data anywhere in the US, visit USGS NWIS Groundwater.

Data:CAESER (University of Memphis)·USGS NWIS·MLGW