Abstract
Global groundwater volumes in the upper 2 km of the Earth’s continental
crust – critical for water security – are well estimated. Beyond these
depths, a vast body of largely saline and non-potable groundwater exists
down to at least 10 km —a volume that has not yet been quantified
reliably at the global scale. Here, we estimate the amount of
groundwater present in the upper 10 km of the Earth’s continental crust
by examining the distribution of sedimentary and cratonic rocks with
depth and applying porosity-depth relationships. We demonstrate that
groundwater in the 2-10 km zone (what we call ‘deep groundwater’) has a
volume comparable to that of groundwater in the upper 2 km of the
Earth’s crust. These new estimates make groundwater the largest
continental reservoir of water, ahead of ice sheets, provide a basis to
quantify geochemical cycles, and constrain the potential for large-scale
isolation of waste fluids.