+1 it is the frio river with the leona coming into it about 150yds upstream from the dam. there has not been a flow of water there in years ever since they started fracing in that area cry[/quote]


Fracing has been around since the 1860's. Just about every oil well is fraced.

Here is a good article: https://www.livescience.com/34464-what-is-fracking.html


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Your link says fracking has been used since the 1940's hmmm[/quote]

The Real History Of Fracking
Surprisingly, fracking can be traced back to 1862. It was during the battle of Fredericksburg VA., where Colonel Edward A.L. Roberts discovered something incredible when firing explosive artillery into a narrow canal that was blocking the battleground. The breakthrough was then described as 'superincumbent fluid tamping.'

On April 26, 1865, Edward Roberts obtained his very first patent, for an “Improvement” in exploding torpedoes in artesian wells. In November of 1866, Edward Roberts was awarded patient number 59,936, known as the “Exploding Torpedo.”

https://oilprice.com/Energy/Crude-Oil/The-Real-History-Of-Fracking.html


I did not intend for the link to be a history lesson, it was for a good general explanation of fracing and how liberals have used misinformation to make a demon of fracing. Fracing has absolutely nothing to do with surface water or underground water. A lot of uninformed people played off the drought to claim fracing was causing water wells and rivers to go dry.

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I only pointed out that your link contradicted your own words and you attack me by calling me a liberal and uninformed. You don't even know my political affiliations


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