Groundwater: Alicante, Krisha Porlay, Renz Ray Albert Prado, Jirah Angela Quindoza, Julius
Groundwater: Alicante, Krisha Porlay, Renz Ray Albert Prado, Jirah Angela Quindoza, Julius
Groundwater: Alicante, Krisha Porlay, Renz Ray Albert Prado, Jirah Angela Quindoza, Julius
Alicante, Krisha
Porlay, Renz Ray Albert
Prado, Jirah Angela
Quindoza, Julius
Groundwater
■ After the rain water may move downward through Zone of aeration.
■ Soil Moisture is the water in the upper layer of the zone of aeration
■ Zone of saturation where water moved to this region where the pores of the soil or
rock are filled with water.
■ Groundwater are the water in the zone of saturation
■ Above the zone of saturation is a capillary fringe in which the smaller pores contain
water lifted by capillary action from the zone of saturation.
■ Groundwater is found in two zones. The unsaturated zone, immediately below the
land surface, contains water and air in the open spaces, or pores. The saturated
zone, a zone in which all the pores and rock fractures are filled with water, underlies
the unsaturated zone. The top of the saturated zone is called the water table
(Diagram 1). The water table may be just below or hundreds of feet below the land
surface.
Underground water zones UNDERGROUND WATER OCCURS IN TWO DIFFERENT ZONES [ZONE
OFAERATION & ZONE OF SATURATION]
AERATION ZONE: the zone above the water table is known as the zone of aeration (unsaturated or
vadose zone). which occurs immediately below the land surface in most areas, contains both water and
air.
SATURATED ZONE: a zone in which all interconnected openings are full of water .Water in the saturated
zone is the only underground water that is available to supply wells and springs and is the only water to
which the name ground water is correctly applied Recharge of the saturated zone occurs by percolation of
water from the land surface through the unsaturated zone. The unsaturated zone is, therefore, of great
importance to ground-water hydrology. The unsaturated zone may be divided usefully into three parts: The
soil zone, the intermediate zone, and the upper part of the capillary fringe.
THE SOIL ZONE extends from the land surface to a maximum depth of a meter or two and is the zone
that supports plant growth the porosity and permeability of this zone tend to be higher than those of the
underlying material. the soil zone is underlain by the intermediate zone, which differs in thickness from
place to place depending on the thickness of the soil zone and the depth to the capillary fringe.
THE CAPILLARY FRINGE: the subzone between the unsaturated and saturated zones. the capillary
fringe results from the attraction between water and rocks. region above water table where water rises
due to capillary forces in the porous medium.
THE WATER TABLE: is the level in the saturated zone at which the hydraulic pressure is equal to
atmospheric pressure and is represented by the water level in unused wells. below the water table, the
hydraulic pressure increases with increasing depth.
Sources of Groundwater
■ Precipitation is the main source of groundwater, which may penetrate the soil
directly to the groundwater or may enter surface streams and percolate from these
channels to the groundwater.
■ Groundwater has the lowest priority on the water of precipitation.
■ Interception, depression storage, and soil moisture must be satisfied first before any
amount of water can percolate to the groundwater.
■ Only prolonged periods of heavy precipitation can supply large quantities of water for
groundwater recharge.
■ Other sources of groundwater include water from the deep in the earth which is
carried upward in intrusive rocks, and water which is trapped in sedimentary rocks
during their formation. The quantities of such water are small and they are often so
highly mineralized as to be unsuited for use.
SCHEMATIC DIAGRAM
ILLUSTRATING THE OCCURRENCE
OF GROUNDWATER
Aquifers
■ Groundwater supplies are replenished, or recharged, by rain and snow melt that seeps down
into the cracks and crevices beneath the land's surface. In some areas of the world, people face
serious water shortages because groundwater is used faster than it is naturally replenished. In
other areas groundwater is polluted by human activities.
■ Water in aquifers is brought to the surface naturally through a spring or can be
discharged into lakes and streams. Groundwater can also be extracted through a
well drilled into the aquifer. A well is a pipe in the ground that fills with
groundwater. This water can be brought to the surface by a pump. Shallow wells
may go dry if the water table falls below the bottom of the well. Some wells,
called artesian wells, do not need a pump because of natural pressures that
force the water up and out of the well.
■ In areas where material above the aquifer is permeable, pollutants can readily
sink into groundwater supplies. Groundwater can be polluted by landfills, septic
tanks, leaky underground gas tanks, and from overuse of fertilizers and
pesticides. If groundwater becomes polluted, it will no longer be safe to drink.
■ AN AQUIFER is a geologic unit that can store and transmit water at rates fast enough supply
reasonable amounts to wells. Unconsolidated sands and gravels, sandstones, limestones and
dolomites, basalt flows, and fractured plutonic and metamorphic rocks are examples of rock
units known to be aquifers. A confining layer is a geologic unit having little or no intrinsic
permeability.
■ Confining layers are sometimes subdivided into aquitards, quicludes, and aquifuges.
- an aquifuge is an absolutely impermeable unit that will not transmit any water.
-An aquitard is a layer of low permeability that can store ground water and also transmit
it slowly from one aquifer to another.
-An aquiclude is A formation which contains water but cannot transmit it rapidly enough
to furnish a significant supply to a well or spring.
The water table
■ Flowing artesian well is a well piercing the confining stratum acts much like a
piezometer in a pipe and water will rise in the well to the level of local static
pressure( artesian head).
■ Piezometric surface defined by the water level in the group of artesian wells and is
the artesian equivalent of the water table.
■ An artesian aquifer is an underground layer which holds groundwater under
pressure. This causes the water level in the well to rise to a point where the
pressure is equal to the weight of water putting it under pressure. This type
of well is called an artesian well. Water may even reach the ground surface if
the natural pressure is high enough, in which case the well is called a flowing
artesian well.
Types of wells
■ Artesian well is one in which the water rises above the level at which it is
encountered in the aquifer because of pressure in the confined water of the aquifer.
■ Flowing well an artesian well where the pressure raise the water above the casing
head.
Hydraulics of Wells
K = coefficient of permeability
m = thickness of aquifer
rw = radius of the well
T = transmissibility of aquifer = K.m
The above equation is called equilibrium or Thiem’s equation and is used to determine piezometric head at
any point at a radial distance r from the centre of the well. Carrying the logic further if the piezometric heads in
two observation wells say h1 and h2 at two points r1and r2 distance radially away respectively from the centre of
the pumped well are measured during the pumping test, coefficient of permeability ‘K can be easily calculated.
The formula can be written as follows (r2 > r1) The above method is popularly called Thiem’s method.
Calculation of Discharge in Unconfined Aquifer Using Theim’s Formula for
Steady Flow:
■ considering the steady state condition, the discharge at any distance r towards
the well is given by applying Darcy’s formula in conjunction with simplifying
assumptions made by Dupit
■ Q = K A I = 2πr K h dh/dr
■ Integrating the equation (1) between limits h = H2 at r = rw h = head at any
distance r
■
Then taking limit when h = H1 at r = R, (the radius of influence) equation (a) will
become
■ http://www.yourarticlelibrary.com/water/groundwater/calculation-of-discharge-in-
confined-and-unconfined-aquifer/61128
■ https://www.usgs.gov/faqs/what-groundwater?qt-news_science_products=0#qt-
news_science_products
■ https://www.groundwater.org/get-informed/basics/whatis.html
■ https://www.slideshare.net/ahmedwassel/underground-water-58169065
■ https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artesian_aquifer