From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Aquifer in the Amador Valley, California, United States
The Bishop Subbasin is an
aquifer that resides between two subsurface structures of the
Tassajara Formation in the northern extremity of the
Amador Valley ,
California .
[1] This aquifer is a sub-unit of the Livermore-Amador Groundwater Basin. The Bishop Subbasin is associated with the locale of
San Ramon, California in
Contra Costa County .
[2] The Bishop Subbasin along with the
Mocho Subbasin is one of the aquifers in the
Livermore Valley that has been studied the most heavily for benefits of injection of reclaimed
reverse osmosis waters.
[3]
See also
References
^ Environmental Screening Analysis, 2127 Railroad Avenue, Livermore, California , Earth Metrics Inc report no. 7785, February, 1989
^ Dublin Quadrangle, California , 7.5 minute series,
U.S. Geological Survey , U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington DC (1980);
^
[1] Thomas L. Bonnie, What are the projected impacts of injecting reclaimed,
reverse osmosis water into the Livermore-Amador Groundwater Basin? (2000)
External links
Canada United States Mexico South America Australia New Zealand Africa Middle-East Europe Related articles
Bodies of water Counties Cities and towns
Major cities 100k–250k 50k–100k 25k–50k 10k–25k Under 10k
CDPs over 10k Sub-regions Other