So today after checking out some locations in the South Jersey area on Bing.com, a question came to mind about the hundreds of quarries that dot our landscape. How deep do these things go? Is there a set depth that companies can dig to or is the depth limited by the length of bucket cable or vacume hose? Almost all have water in them, but I guess it varies by location wheather it's just runoff or ground water. And thinking about the older quarries like the one at Old Half Way (I know most of that is newer), how could they dig so deep for clay and still keep the water from filling things back in? Steam pumps? I used to live right next to a huge sandstone gravel pit and it seemed like the water table was around 10 below the grounds surface but any equipment would get stuck if you went deeper. Can newer quarries tap into all the water tables like the Cohansey Aquifer as it seems like that would open the water to pollution? If anyone here knows, I'd appreciate the feedback.