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3352237 
Technical Report 
Land subsidence in the United States 
Galloway, D; Jones, DR; Ingebritsen, SE 
1999 
U.S. Department of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey 
Reston, VA 
Land subsidence in the United States. USGS Circular 1182 
English 
has chapter(s) 3349092 Sinkholes, west-central Florida
has erratum 3352238 : Errata
Land subsidence is a gradual settling or sudden sinking of the Earth's surface owing to subsurface movement of earth materials. Subsidence is a global problem and, in the United States, more than 17,000 square miles in 45 States, an area roughly the size of New Hampshire and Vermont combined, have been directly affected by subsidence. The principal causes are aquifer-system compaction, drainage of organic soils, underground mining, hydrocompaction, natural compaction, sinkholes, and thawing permafrost (National Research Council, 1991). More than 80 percent of the identified subsidence in the Nation is a consequence of our exploitation of underground water, and the increasing development of land and water resources threatens to exacerbate existing land-subsidence problems and initiate new ones. In many areas of the arid Southwest, and in more humid areas underlain by soluble rocks such as limestone, gypsum, or salt, land subsidence is an often- overlooked environmental consequence of our land- and water-use practices.