The attitude toward groundwater changed during the period 1971–1974, with all phases of the water‐interested community, i.e., the general public, local, state, and federal governmental bodies, and the scientific and engineering professions, seeing groundwater from new perspectives. Water resource problems became more complex and demanding of attention, and population growth and industrial and irrigation requirements placed greater emphasis on groundwater, both as a source of water supply and as a disposal medium. New instruments of groundwater management were sought, and groundwater studies shifted from the qualitative to the quantitative. Ground‐water became more generally recognized during the past quadrennial as an important natural resource in the United States, a resource worthy of formal management, regulation, and realistic conservation.