After years of back-and-forth with Oklahoma, Texas finally redrew its northern borderline to solve a tricky water dilemma, the Texas General Land Office announced in a Thursday news release. Neither state grew larger or smaller, however, as they only exchanged a sliver of land amounting to 1.34 acres, according to the North Texas Municipal Water District. Although this particular border issue goes back decades, the ball really started rolling in August 2009, after a discovery in Lake Texoma, a border lake in which Texas operates a water pump station. The North Texas Municipal Water District di…