Thursday, 12 September 2013

Huge Underground Water Reserve Discovered in Kenya


Wonderful!! Scientists have found an underground water reserve in Kenya so large that it could meet the entire country's water needs for the next 70 years. Yea right, 70 good years!
Using satellite, radar and geological technology, scientists found an underground layer of water-bearing material—that contains 200 billion cubic meters of fresh water.

UNESCO and the Kenyan government put together a team to find water in Kenya. The just discovered Lotikipi Basin Aquifer, is significantly larger than other aquifers discovered in the region. In fact, it holds 900% more water than what's in Kenya's current reserves. Just look at the size of this thing:
Scientists Have Found a Huge Underground Water Reserve in Kenya
For a country like Kenya that deals with droughts all too often, the discovery is life changing. Possibly even country changing.

How did the aquifer get discovered? It sounds so simple. Alain Gachet, the CEO of Radar Technologies International and the guy behind the search for water in Kenya, and his team used a mapping system they called WATEX to find the water. WATEX basically uses existing satellite, radar and geological maps and combines them to see what's underneath the ground. The mapping system was originally meant to find mineral reserves in Africa but is now being used to find water. UNESCO now hopes to take this system in hopes of finding water in other African countries. 

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