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Editing Aquifer

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The amount of water that the open tile receives is random, on average four per month, possibly reaching as low as two or as high as six. The same amount of water is received regardless of the number of adjacent aquifer tiles.
 
The amount of water that the open tile receives is random, on average four per month, possibly reaching as low as two or as high as six. The same amount of water is received regardless of the number of adjacent aquifer tiles.
  
Since water will leak into tiles '''below''' an aquifer, you must dig out and wall off or smooth the same tiles in every single damp Z-level you wish to utilize, or else find all lower z-levels flooded by an alarming downpour coming from a seemingly unknown source, that being the unmined or unsmoothed aquifer tiles above. It will seem as though the floor is leaking water, but it is actually coming through the ceiling. There is no need to smooth or construct floors, only solid tiles can leak water. However, if what you're trying to do is dig out a cistern, the most efficient way is to simply dig a large area out from directly under an aquifer layer, since every single tile will fill with water at a steady rate until it reaches 7/7. You'll know you're digging in the right level to make a cistern when every single tile you're trying to dig out is damp stone, but the layer below is dry.
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If you wish to excavate a large area within a light aquifer without painstakingly and continually walling it off, dig regular drains to an open area in a non-aquifer layer where the water can evaporate more quickly than it arrives.
 
 
If you wish to excavate a large area within a light aquifer without painstakingly and continually walling it off, dig regular drains to an open area in a non-aquifer layer where the water can evaporate more quickly than it arrives. It will need to be much larger than the area of the aquifer dug out, however.
 
  
 
Unlike heavy aquifers, light aquifer tiles do not drain away water.
 
Unlike heavy aquifers, light aquifer tiles do not drain away water.

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