Johnston, R.H.2008-01-142008-01-141973-06http://udspace.udel.edu/handle/19716/3052The Columbia (Pleistocene) deposits of Delaware form a regional water-table aquifer, which supplies about half the ground water pumped in the State. The aquifer is composed principally of sands which occur as channel fillings in northern Delaware and as a broad sheet across central and southern Delaware. The saturated thickness of the aquifer ranges from a few feet in many parts of northern Delaware to more than 180 feet in southern Delaware. Throughout 1,500 square miles of central and southern Delaware (75 percent of the State's area), the saturated thickness ranges from 25 to 180 feet and the Columbia deposits compose all or nearly all of the water-table aquifer.en-USHydrology Of The Columbia (Pleistocene) Deposits Of DelawareRegional Water-Table Aquifersaturated thicknessnorthern Delawaresouthern DelawareHydrology Of The Columbia (Pleistocene) Deposits Of Delaware: An Appraisal Of A Regional Water-Table AquiferTechnical Report