OPINION
¶ 1 In the third of a series of interlocutory opinions in this comprehensive general stream adjudication, we address two questions: Do federal reserved water rights extend to groundwater (underground water) that is not subject to prior appropriation under Arizona law? Are federal reserved rights holders entitled to greater protection from groundwater pumping than are water users who hold only state law rights? We answer both questions in the affirmative.
*414 I. Procedural History
¶ 2 The purpose of a comprehensive general stream adjudication is to determine “the nature, extent and relative priority of the water rights” of all who use the water of a “river system and source.” Ariz.Rev.Stat. Ann. (“A.R.S.”) §§ 45-251(2), 252(A); see also 43 U.S.C. § 666 (1982). The underlying adjudication is a consolidated effort to achieve that purpose with respect to waters within the Upper Salt, Verde, Upper Gila, Lower Gila, Agua Fria, Upper Santa Cruz, and San Pedro watersheds. The Little Colorado watershed is the subject of a similar adjudication.
¶ 3 The pertinent waters within a “river system and source” are (1) those subject to prior appropriation and (2) those subject to claims based on federal law. A.R.S. § 45-251(4). A substantial task is to determine the extent to which each category extends to hydrologically connected underground water pumped from wells.
In re the General Adjudication of All Rights to Use Water in the Gila River Sys. (“Gila River II
”),
¶ 4 A detailed procedural history of this case may be found in
Gila River II,
¶ 5 After issuing
Gila River II,
we interrupted consideration of the six issues and accepted special action jurisdiction to resolve a challenge to the constitutionality of Arizona statutes enacted in 1995 that attempted comprehensive procedural and substantive changes to Arizona’s surface water law.
San Carlos Apache Tribe v. Super. Ct.,
II. On Groundwater, Surface Water, Subflow, and the Reserved Water Rights Doctrine
¶ 6 The trial court held that federal “reserved rights” apply not only to surface wa *415 ter and subflow, appropriable categories under Arizona law, but also to non-appropriable groundwater. The court also held that federal reserved rights holders are entitled to protection from any off-reservation groundwater pumping that “significantly diminishes” the amount of water available to satisfy the purpose of the reservation. These rulings attribute more expansive water rights to federal claimants than to those asserting claims pursuant only to state law. To explain this aspect of the trial court’s decision and to set the context for our discussion, we review some history and terms.
A. Arizona’s Bifurcated System of Water Rights
¶ 7 In Gila River If we summarized the bifurcation of Arizona law respecting surface water and groundwater:
[Rjights associated with water found in lakes, ponds, and flowing streams — surface water — have been governed by the doctrine of prior appropriation____ On the other hand, underground water has been governed by the traditional common law notion that water percolating generally through the soil belongs to the overlying landowner, as limited by the doctrine of reasonable use. 3
¶ 8 Arizona does not entirely confine the doctrine of prior appropriation to surface waters. Our courts have extended prior appropriation to a category known as “sub-flow,” historically defined as “those waters which slowly find their way through the sand and gravel constituting the bed of the stream, or the lands under or immediately adjacent to the stream, and are themselves a part of the surface stream.”
Id.
at 387,
¶ 9 Yet the notion of subflow is an artifice, as we acknowledged in
Gila River If
that rests on a hydrological misconception.
When water is pumped from an aquifer by means of a well, it creates what is known as a “cone of depression.” This is caused by the groundwater in the aquifer moving toward the well. If the material in the aquifer has a high transmissivity value, the cone of depression will be wide and shallow. If, on the other hand, the aquifer does not easily transmit water, the cone of depression will be steep and narrow. If water is pumped continuously from the well, the cone of depression will become larger. If the water table is close enough to the earth’s surface to allow this cone to cut into a surface stream, water from the stream would directly infiltrate into the ground, following the slope of the cone of depression until it reached the well. Even if the cone did not intersect the stream directly, it could affect the amount of water in the stream by intercepting water that would otherwise migrate toward the stream. This would cause less water to be available in the stream bed. If water were removed by pumping from a well and none *416 were reintroduced, the water table would decline. If several wells were punaping, there would be a more rapid decline. Any time the rate of water withdrawn from an aquifer exceeds the rate of recharge, the water table will decline.
Leshy & Belanger,
¶ 10 Conforming their law to hydrological reality, most prior appropriation jurisdictions by now have abandoned the bifurcated treatment of ground and surface waters and undertaken unitary management of water supplies. Id. at 659-60. In Gila River II, however, we declined to do so, explaining:
[I]t is too late to change or overrule {Southwest Cotton ]____ More than six decades have passed since Southwest Cotton was decided. The Arizona legislature has erected statutory frameworks for regulating surface water and groundwater based on Southwest Cotton. Arizona’s agricultural, industrial, mining, and urban interests have accommodated themselves to those frameworks. Southwest Cotton has been part of the constant backdrop for vast investments, the founding and growth of towns and cities, and the lives of our people.
Gila River II,
B. All Water Appropriable and All Water Subject to Claims Based Upon Federal Law
¶ 11 A subflow standard, once it has been established, will serve to identify well-users who pump water subject to prior appropriation. But this adjudication is not limited to water subject to prior appropriation; it extends also to water subject to claims based on federal law. An adjudication such as this cannot achieve its comprehensive purpose without quantifying and prioritizing federal, as well as state law, claims.
Since there is not enough water to meet everyone’s demands, a determination of priorities and a quantification of the water rights accompanying those priorities must be made. Obviously, such a task can be accomplished only in a single proceeding in which all substantial claimants are before the court so that all claims may be examined, priorities determined, and allocations made.
See United States v. Super. Ct.,
¶ 12 Approximately two-thirds of the land in Arizona is federally held, much of it in trust for Indian tribes. See Arizona Statistical Abstract 173-177 (1993 ed.). The McCarran Amendment permits us to include federal claimants in the adjudication, for it permits the United States to participate in state court proceedings that comprehensively adjudicate “rights to the use of water of a river system or other source.” 43 U.S.C. § 666(a). In conformity with the McCarran Amendment, our general adjudication statute, A.R.S. § 45-252(A), authorizes determination of “the nature, extent and relative priority of the water rights of all persons in the river system and source.” And A.R.S. § 45-251(4), as we have indicated, defines “river system and source” to include not only appropriable water, but “all water subject to claims based upon federal law.” 5
¶ 13 The rub is that, in order to adjudicate and quantify water rights based upon federal law, the Arizona courts must afford federal claimants the benefit, when state and federal law conflict, of federal sub
*417
stantive law.
See Arizona v. San Carlos Apache Tribe,
¶ 14 The reserved water rights doctrine provides:
[Wjhen the Federal Government withdraws its land from the public domain and reserves it for a federal purpose, the Government, by implication, reserves appurtenant water then unappropriated to the extent needed to accomplish the purpose of the reservation. In so doing the United States acquires a reserved right in unappropriated water which vests on the date of the reservation and is superior to the rights of future appropriators.
Cappaert v. United States, 426
U.S. 128, 138,
III. Do Federal Reserved Rights Extend to Groundwater?
¶ 15 Moving from background to foreground, we consider the trial court’s conclusion that the reserved water rights of federal claimants — when measured by federal substantive law — are not constrained by Arizona’s bifurcated treatment of surface water and groundwater. According to the trial court, federal law establishes a reserved right to groundwater, if and to the extent that groundwater may be necessary to accomplish the purpose of a federal reservation.
¶ 16 The state law parties respond that the Supreme Court has never applied reserved rights to groundwater and that this court, if not obliged to do so, should decline to apply a federal doctrine so disjunctive to established doctrines of our state. In support of this argument, the state law parties cite the example of
In re All Rights to Use Water in the Big Horn River System,
¶ 17 We can appreciate the hesitation of the Big Horn court to break new ground, but we do not find its reasoning persuasive. That no previous court has come to grips with an issue does not relieve a present court, fairly confronted with the issue, of the obligation to do so. Moreover, as the Big Horn court acknowledged, we do not write on a blank slate.
¶ 18 The reserved rights doctrine derives from
Winters v. United States,
¶ 19 In
Cappaert,
the Court applied the reserved rights doctrine in a case that turned on the hydrological connection of surface water and groundwater. There, upon application by the United States, a federal district court had issued, and the Ninth Circuit had affirmed, an injunction restricting pumping from wells drilled on private ranch land bordering the Devil’s Hole National Monument. The wells drew water from the same underground source as a pool within the monument where lived an endangered breed of fish. One purpose of the monument was to preserve the pool and its rare fish.
Id.
at 141,
¶20 Although the Ninth Circuit, in its
Cappaert
opinion, expressly determined that the reserved rights doctrine extends to groundwater,
7
the Supreme Court found it unnecessary to reach that question, explaining that the water in the pool was surface water.
Cappaert,
¶ 21 In Cappaert, as before, the Supreme Court left the question of a reserved right to groundwater unresolved. The Court’s decisions, however, provide guideposts toward our holding that such a right exists.
¶22 We find one guidepost in
Winters,
where the Court stressed that the arid lands of the Fort Belknap Reservation could not be made “inhabitable and capable of growing crops” without an implicit reservation of Milk River waters.
Winters,
¶23 We find another guidepost to decision in the Supreme Court’s association of surface and groundwater in
Cappaert
as “integral parts of the hydrologic cycle.”
Cappaert,
¶ 24 In summary, the cases we have cited lead us to conclude that if the United States implicitly intended, when it established reservations, to reserve sufficient unappropriated water to meet the reservations’ needs, it must have intended that reservation of water to come from whatever particular sources each reservation had at hand. The significant question for the purpose of the reserved rights doctrine is not whether the water runs above or below the ground but whether it is necessary to accomplish the purpose of the reservation.
¶ 25 The state law parties argue, however, that even if the reserved rights doctrine applies equally in principle to groundwater as to surface water, we should decline to extend the doctrine to groundwater out of deference to state water law. Where federal rights are at issue, a state court may adopt state law as the rule of decision if to do so would not frustrate or impair a federal purpose.
See United States v. Kimbell Foods, Inc.,
¶26 In
Winters,
the Supreme Court acknowledged the extensive cultivation, construction, and development that Montana settlers had undertaken in reliance upon diversions of water accomplished pursuant to state law.
¶ 27 It is apparent from the case law that we may not withhold application of the reserved rights doctrine purely out of deference to state law. Rather, we may not defer to state law where to do so would defeat federal water rights.
¶ 28 The state law parties next argue, however, that deference to state law in this case would not defeat federal water rights. Specifically, they maintain that there has never been a need to reserve groundwater in a state that provides all overlying landowners an equal right to pump as much
*420
groundwater as they can put to reasonable use upon their land.
9
Cf. Wilson v. Omaha Indian Tribe,
¶ 29 This argument, however, overlooks that federal reserved water rights are by nature a preserve intended to “eontinue[ ] through years.”
See Winters,
¶ 30 Under the “reasonable use” doctrine, Arizona has consumed far more groundwater than nature can replenish.
See
Arizona Dep’t Water Resources, Arizona Water Resources Assessment: vol. 1, Inventory and Analysis 9 (1994); Phfiip R. Higdon & Terence W. Thompson,
The 1980 Arizona Groundwater Management Code,
1980 Ariz. St. L.J. 621, 623. The Department of Water Resources presented evidence to the trial court in this case of streams in transition from perennial to intermittent within the San Pedro and Upper San Pedro watersheds, of others nearing an ephemeral character, and of others in geographical “retreat.”
See
Arizona Dep’t Water Resources, Gila River System Groundwater-Surface Water Interaction Study 31-32 (1987). Within the Lower Gila River watershed, groundwater tables have been so lowered as to sever the connection between ground and surface water.
See
Leshy & Belanger,
supra,
at 665-66. Some Indian reservations have been entirely “dewatered” by off-reservation pumping.
See Gila River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community v. United States,
¶ 31 For the foregoing reasons, we hold that the trial court correctly determined that the federal reserved water rights doctrine applies not only to surface water but to groundwater. We decide this issue in the abstract at this time as a necessary step in determining the scope of interests to be encompassed by this adjudication. We do not, however, decide that any particular federal reservation, Indian or otherwise, has a reserved right to groundwater. A reserved right to groundwater may only be found where other waters are inadequate to accomplish the purpose of a reservation. To determine the purpose of a reservation and to determine the waters necessary to accomplish that purpose are inevitably fact-intensive inquiries that must be made on a reservation-by-reservation basis.
See United States v. New Mexico,
¶ 32 Likewise, we do not now attempt to impose a standard upon the trial court for determining the purpose of any reservation. That standard, in our judgment, is not well-suited to abstract declara *421 tion and should instead emerge from testing in the solid context of the facts. 10
IV. Protection Against Off-Reservation Pumping
¶ 33 Next is the question what level of protection federal reserved right holders may claim against groundwater pumping that depletes their water supply. Are they limited, as the state law parties contend, to such protection as state law offers to state and private appropriators, or did the trial court correctly determine that the federal reserved right entails whatever broader protection may be necessary to maintain sufficient water to accomplish the purpose of a reservation?
¶ 34 We answer this question first with respect to federal reservations that enjoy a reserved right to surface waters. As we have indicated in previous discussion, the common law of Arizona does not permit surface appropriators to protect their source of surface waters from depletion by groundwater pumping unless that pumping draws from the relatively narrow category of “subflow.” See supra ¶ ¶ 8-10. More distant pumping within a common aquifer is governed by the relatively unfettered doctrine of reasonable use. See supra n. 3. Thus, for example, if Cappaert had arisen in Arizona, the application of state law might have precluded any restriction of adjoining pumping and have permitted Devil's Hole to be pumped dry.
¶35 The Salt River Project points out, however, that the standard for defining sub-flow awaits our further review and may conceivably be set sufficiently broadly to protect the surface water rights of some or all of the federal reservations. 11 We acknowledge that possibility, but at this stage of the adjudication we must provide for the contrary possibility as well. The question before us is not whether any particular reservation is now entitled to broader protection than state law provides. 12 The question is rather whether a federal reservation may invoke broader protection than state law provides if state law turns out to be inadequate to preserve the waters necessary to accomplish the purpose of the reservation. 13
¶36 In our view,
Cappaert
provides an explicit answer to that question. First,
Cappaert
tells us that “determination of reserved water rights is not governed by state law but derives from the federal purpose of the reservation.”
¶ 37 What Cappaert holds with respect to the protection of surface waters, our discussion in Part III enables us to apply to *422 the protection of groundwater as well. We have held that the federal reserved right extends to groundwater when groundwater is necessary to accomplish the purpose of a federal reservation. We similarly hold that once a federal reservation establishes a reserved right to groundwater, it may invoke federal law to protect its groundwater from subsequent diversion to the extent such protection is necessary to fulfill its reserved right.
¶ 38 We thus affirm the trial court’s conclusion that federal reserved rights holders enjoy greater protection from groundwater pumping than do holders of state law rights. We do not, however, read the case law to require a zero-impact standard of protection for federal reserved rights. The Supreme Court has repeatedly acknowledged that the reserved rights doctrine “reserves only that amount of water necessary to fulfill the purpose of the reservation, no more.”
Cappaert,
¶39 In Part III we declined in the abstract to declare a standard for determining the purpose of a reservation. We here decline in the abstract to define how imminent a threat to a reservation’s essential waters must be in order to warrant injunctive relief. The latter standard, like the former, should be grounded in the bedrock of the facts.
Y. Conclusion
¶40 In
United States v. Superior Court
we wrote, “In the scheme of priorities, the claims of the federal government ... and of the Indians rank high. While the amount of water actually used by these entities may have been negligible until recent times, the magnitude of the right to use water on these lands has been far from negligible.”
¶ 41 We recognize that our determination that reserved water rights may encompass groundwater threatens to disrupt the assumptions that underlie state law uses. State law parties may question how our present holding may be squared with our decision in
Gila River II
to retain Arizona’s traditional bifurcation of the law of surface and groundwater. We are no less cognizant now than when we decided
Gila River II
that Arizona’s agricultural, industrial, mining, and urban interests have accommodated themselves to the framework of
Southwest Cotton. Gila River II,
¶ 42 We do not underestimate the burden that the State of Arizona will face in accommodating federal reserved water rights within its water resource management. Nor do we underestimate the burden that the trial court will face in adjudicating the extent and relative priority of such rights. Unless there is a comprehensive settlement, however, we must heed the lesson that “the best way out is always through.”
14
To solve the conflict and uncertainty that reserved rights engender, we must quantify them, for we may not ignore them.
See Colville Confederated Tribes v. Walton,
¶ 43 We answer issues 4 and 5 as follows: Federal reserved rights extend to groundwater to the extent groundwater is necessary to accomplish the purpose of a reservation. Holders of federal reserved rights enjoy greater protection from groundwater pumping than do holders of state law rights to the extent that greater protection may be necessary to maintain sufficient water to accomplish the purpose of a reservation.
Notes
. For additional procedural history, see
Arizona v. San Carlos Apache Tribe,
. We defined the six issues as follows:
1. Do the procedures for filing and service of pleadings adopted by the trial court in its Pre-trial Order Number 1 comport with due process under the United States and Arizona Constitutions?
2. Did the trial court err in adopting its 50%/90 day test for determining whether underground water is "appropriable” under A.R.S.§ 45-141?
3. What is the appropriate standard to be applied in determining the amount of water reserved for federal lands?
4. Is non-appropriable groundwater subject to federal reserved rights?
5. Do federal reserved rights holders enjoy greater protection from groundwater pumping than holders of state law rights?
6. Must claims of conflicting water use or interference with water rights be resolved as part of the general adjudication?
. The doctrine of reasonable use permits an overlying landowner to capture as much groundwater as can reasonably be used upon the overlying land and relieves the landowner from liability for a resulting diminution of another landowner’s water supply.
See Bristor v. Cheatham,
. In Gila River II, we referred those seeking a detailed history of the evolution of Arizona water law to John D. Leshy & James Belanger, Arizona Law Where Ground and Surface Water Meet, 20 Ariz. St. L.J. 657 (1988).
. The City of Phoenix argues that our general adjudication statute permits us to adjudicate federal water claims only to the extent that they are claims to water that is appropriable under state law and, thus, that we lack jurisdiction to consider whether federal reserved rights extend to non-appropriable groundwater. We summarily reject this argument because it is contrary to the plain, conjunctive definitional language of A.R.S. § 45-251(4) and because such an interpretation would deprive this adjudication of the comprehensive quality that our general adjudication statute was intended to provide.
. Some recorded decisions have, in fact, addressed the question, though their analysis was relatively terse.
See Tweedy v. Texas Co.,
.
See United States v. Cappaert,
. As evidence of the deference that the federal government traditionally accords state water law, the state law parties point to statutes such as the 1877 Desert Lands Act, in which Congress effected "a severance of all waters upon the public domain, not theretofore appropriated, from the land itself," and reserved the waters "for the use of the public under the laws of the states and territories.”
California Oregon Power Co. v. Beaver Portland Cement Co., 295
U.S. 142, 158, 162,
. See supra note 3.
. Accordingly, we reject the Arizona Tribes’ assertion that the Indian tribes have a reserved right to all of the waters appurtenant to their reservations. In determining Indian treaty rights, the Supreme Court has rejected tribal claims to an “untrammeled right” to exploit scarce natural resources.
Washington v. Washington State Com. Passenger Fishing Vessel Ass'n,
. The Salt River Project contends for a broader standard of subflow than do other state law parties.
. We thus reject as premature the argument of the Arizona Tribes that we should immediately enjoin pumping that is depleting water beneath reservations. Until federal rights are quantified, it cannot be determined which if any of the tribes are entitled to such relief.
. We similarly approach the state law parties’ argument that federal reserved rights holders may be adequately protected against groundwater depletion by the 1980 Groundwater Management Code, which restricts application of the reasonable use doctrine and mandates conservation measures in some parts of Arizona. For example, within "active management areas,” it prevents drilling of new wells or increased pumping, and requires permits for changes in use. See A.R.S. § 45-411 et seq. (West 1994 & Supp.1998). Reservations within active management areas will receive some degree of protection from the Code; reservations outside such areas will not. Whether any particular reservation receives adequate protection of its reserved water rights through the combination of Arizona’s common and statutory law remains to be determined.
. R. Frost, A Servant to Servants in Complete Poems of Robert Frost 83 (Holt, Rinehart and Winston ed.1964)
