Chap11 Gwater

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Ground Water

Chapter 11

How does water get underground ?


How is water stored underground?
How does water move?
How do we find it?
Why we need to protect it.

Lake Powell. Water levels are decreasing every year since 1999.

Ground Water
Ground Water lies beneath the ground surface, filling
pores in sediments and sedimentary rocks and fractures
in other rock types
Represents 0.6% of the hydrosphere (35x the water in
all lakes and rivers combined)
Resupplied by slow infiltration
of precipitation
Cleaner than surface water
Accessed by wells

The Water Table


Subsurface zone in which all rock
openings are filled with water is the
saturated zone
Water table, top of the saturated zone
Water level at surface of most lakes and
rivers corresponds to local water table

Above the water table is an unsaturated


region called the vadose zone

Ground Water Movement


Movement of ground water through
pores and fractures is relatively slow
(cms to meters/day) compared to
flow of water in surface streams
Flow velocities in cavernous limestones
can be much higher (kms/day)

Flow velocity depends upon:


Slope of the water table
Permeability of the rock or sediment

The Water Table

A perched water table is above and separated from main water


table by an unsaturated zone
Commonly produced by thin lenses of impermeable rock (e.g., shales or
clays) within permeable ones

Estimated Use of Water

Groundwater levels are roughly constant since 1970


But population needs are steadily increasing

Water Distribution on Earth

Hydrologic Cycle

Water in the hydrologic cycle moves through the atmosphere, crust,


oceans, lakes, and streams. (numbers are in thousands of cubic km/yr)
Runoff is fresh rain water that flows into rivers and streams

Annual Precipitation

Annual Runoff

Dry regions such as


California, Arizona,
New Mexico has low
precip and low runoff
because rain
evaporates or is
absorbed by soil.
High runoff in the
Missippii R. and
Colorado R. delivers
water to regions with
low precip.

Porosity and Permeability


Porosity - the percentage of rock
that consists of voids or openings

Volume of empty space in a rock


A rocks ability to hold water
Loose sand has ~30-50% porosity
Compacted sandstone may have only 10-20% porosity

Permeability - the capacity of a rock to transmit fluid


through pores and fractures
Interconnectedness of pore spaces

Porosity and Permeability


Most sandstones and conglomerates are porous and permeable
Granites, schists, unfractured limestones are impermeable
The City of Scotts Valley and
surrounding areas rely solely on
groundwater from the Santa
Margarita Groundwater Basin
for their water supply. Scotts
Valley Water District (District)
is responsible for provision and
management of water and has
been active in developing
strategies to optimize water
resources.

Highly permeable sandstone deposits that


crop out above a proposed recharge basin
site in Scotts Valley

Porosity and Permeability


Shales tend to be porous but not permeable.

Outcrop in Svalabard where Conoco Phillips is trying to find safe


ways to dispose of CO2 emissions in permeable sandstone layers
bounded by impermeable shale layers.

Aquifers and Aquitards


Aquifer - body of saturated rock
or sediment through which
water can move easily

Sandstone
Conglomerate
Well-jointed limestone
Highly fractured rock

Aquitard - rock/sediment that


retards ground water flow
due to low porosity and/or
permeability
Shale, clay, unfractured crystalline rocks

Unconfined Aquifer

Unconfined Aquifer
Has a water table, and is only partly filled with water
Rapidly recharged by precipitation infiltrating down to the
saturated zone

Confined Aquifers

Confined Aquifer
Completely filled with water under pressure (hydrostatic head)
Separated from surface by impermeable confining layer/aquitard
Very slowly recharged

Wells
Well - a deep hole dug or drilled
into the ground to obtain water
from an aquifer
Wells in unconfined aquifers, water
level before pumping is the water
table
Water enters well from pore spaces
within the surrounding aquifer
creating a cone of depression
Water table can be lowered by
pumping, a process known as
drawdown
movie

Insert new Fig.


11.8 here

Artesian Wells

Water may rise to a level above the top of a confined aquifer,


producing an artesian well

Springs and Streams


Spring - a place where water flows
naturally from rock or sediment
onto the ground surface
Gaining streams - receive water
from the saturated zone
Gaining stream surface is local water table

Losing streams - lose water to the


saturated zone
Stream beds lie above the water table
Maximum infiltration occurs through
streambed, producing permanent
mound in the water table beneath dry
channel

movie

Ground Water Contamination


Infiltrating water may bring
contaminants down to the water table,
including (but not limited to):
Pesticides/herbicides
Fertilizers
Landfill pollutants (bug poison cans,
broken thermometers, oven cleaner cans)
Heavy metals
Bacteria, viruses and parasites from
sewage, cattle industry
Industrial chemicals (PCBs, TCE)
Acid mine drainage
Radioactive waste
Oil and gasoline

Ground Water Contamination

Contaminated ground water can be extremely difficult and


expensive to clean up (decades and millions $)

Ground Water Contamination

Contamination from leakage in


*Landfills
*Animal feed lots (bacteria, virus
parasites
*Industrial toxic waste

Nuclear Waste Disposal


Yucca Mountain, Nevada

Nuclear waste disposal site


180 km NW of Las Vegas
Low rainfall, depth above water table
Approved by President G.W. Bush 2002

Balancing Withdrawal
and Recharge
If ground water is withdrawn more
rapidly than it is recharged, the
water table will drop
Dropping water table can lead to
ground subsidence
surface of the ground drops as
buoyancy from ground water is
removed, allowing rock or sediment to
compact and sink

Subsidence can crack foundations,


roads and pipelines
Areas of extremely high ground water
pumping (such as for crop irrigation in
dry regions) have subsided 7-9 meters

Caves, Sinkholes, and Karst


Caves - naturally-formed
underground chambers
Acidic ground water dissolves
limestone along joints and bedding
planes

Caves near the surface may collapse


and produce sinkholes
Rolling hills, disappearing streams,
and sinkholes are common in areas
with karst topography

Hot Water Underground


Hot springs - springs in which the water
is warmer than human body temperature
Ground water heated by nearby magma
bodies or circulation to unusually deep (and
warm) levels within the crust
Hot water is less dense than cool water and
thus rises back to the surface on its own

Geysers - hot springs that periodically


erupt hot water and steam
Minerals often precipitate around geysers as
hot water cools rapidly in the air

Geothermal Energy
Geothermal energy is produced
using natural steam or superheated
water
No CO2 or acid rain are produced
(clean energy source)
Some toxic gases given off (e.g.,
sulfur compounds)
Can be used directly to heat buildings
Superheated water can be very
corrosive to pipes and equipment

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