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Groundwater Chapter 11. Importance of groundwater. Groundwater is water found in sediment, plus narrow fractures in bedrock Groundwater is the largest reservoir of fresh water available to humans. Distribution of Groundwater. Fresh water of the Hydrosphere. The water table.
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Importance of groundwater • Groundwater is water found in sediment, plus narrow fractures in bedrock • Groundwater is the largest reservoir of fresh water available to humans
Distribution of Groundwater
The water table • Water table is the upper limit of saturation • Variations in the water table • Depth is highly variable • Varies seasonally and from year to year • Shape is usually similar to surface topography
Question: If you had to drill a water well in Colorado, where would you do it the least expensively? Deeper holes cost more money. • In granite in the Mountains on a ridgetop • In granite halfway between Boulder Creek and the nearest ridgetop • In the plains near the Platte river, a region underlain by sandstone at shallow depths. D) Nowhere, since groundwater does not exist in Colorado.
Factors influencing movement of groundwater • Permeability, aquitards, and aquifers • Permeability – the ability of a material to transmit a fluid • Aquitard – an impermeable layer that hinders water movement (such as clay) • Aquifer – permeable rock strata or sediment that transmits groundwater freely (such as sands and gravels)
Features associated with groundwater • Hot springs • Water is 6-9oC warmer than the mean annual air temperature of the locality • The water for most hot springs is heated by cooling of igneous rock
Distribution of hot springs and geysers in the United States
Mt Princeton Hot Springs
Why are the springs at Mount Princeton hot? • Water runs up a fault zone from great depth • Mining operations in nearby Leadville have changed the groundwater system in Colorado C) A dormant volcano lies under this part of the state and heats the water there D) Global warming is causing springs to heat up around the world
Features associated with groundwater • Geysers • Intermittent hot springs • Water erupts with great force • Occur where extensive underground chambers exist within hot igneous rock • Groundwater heats, expands, changes to steam, and erupts
Evolution of a geyser eruption
Old Faithful geyser in Yellowstone Natl Park
Location of Ogallala Aquifer
Question: How many gallons of groundwater are pumped from aquifers per day in the USA? 100 Million 1 Billion 10 Billion D) 100 Billion
Question: How many gallons of groundwater are pumped from aquifers per day in the USA? 100 Million 1 Billion 10 Billion D) 100 Billion
Features associated with groundwater • Wells • To ensure a continuous supply of water, a well must penetrate below the water table • Pumping of wells can cause • Drawdown (lowering) of the water table • Cone of depression in the water table
Problems associated with groundwater withdrawal • Treating groundwater as a nonrenewable resource • In many places water available to recharge aquifer is less than amount being withdrawn • Subsidence • Ground sinks when water is pumped from wells faster than natural recharge replaces it
How many years does it take to effectively remove groundwater resources in the Great Plains? A) A few years B) Tens of years C) Hundreds of years D) Thousands of years
How many years does it take to effectively remove groundwater resources in the Great Plains? A) A few years B) Tens of years C) Hundreds of years D) Thousands of years
Problems associated with groundwater withdrawal • Saltwater contamination • Groundwater withdrawal causes saltwater to be drawn into wells, contaminating supply • Primarily a problem in coastal areas
Groundwater contamination • Common source is sewage • Extremely permeable aquifers, such as gravel, have such large pores that groundwater may travel long distances without being cleaned • Sewage usually becomes purified as it passes through a few dozen meters of an aquifer composed of sand or permeable sandstone
Contamination of water well by Septic System
Question: Why is ground water flow direction changing direction here? Pumping lowers water table so that it is tilted towards community well Bacteria expand and push water away from septic tank Drought causes water table to become lower Septic wastes always flow towards wells open to the air
Why are septic systems usually only used in rural areas? • It makes for better lyrics in country and western songs • Few people live in these areas and the septic systems can handle the small amounts of waste that is produced • Sewer pipes in cities block the flow of groundwater and render septic systems ineffective • Its expensive to run sewer pipes over large areas for only a few houses • B and D
Why are there no water tanks in Boulder? • Boulder gets its water from the mountains, so there is already lots of hydraulic head • Boulder disguises its water tanks as large rocks in the Flatirons • Boulder doesn’t use enough water to require the use of tanks D) People in Boulder only drink Evian and therefore don’t use tap water
Geologic work of groundwater • Caverns • Most caverns are created by acidic groundwater dissolving soluble rock at or just below the surface in the zone of saturation
Geologic work of groundwater • Groundwater dissolves rock • Groundwater is often mildly acidic • Contains weak carbonic acid • Forms when rainwater dissolves carbon dioxide from the air and from decaying plants • Carbonic acid reacts with calcite in limestone to form calcium bicarbonate, a soluble material
Geologic work of groundwater • Caverns • Features found within caverns • Composed of dripstone (travertine) • Calcite deposited as dripping water evaporates • Collectively, they are called speleothems • Includes stalactites (hanging from the ceiling) and stalagmites (form on the floor of a cavern)
Geologic work of groundwater • Karst topography • Landscapes that have been shaped by the dissolving power of groundwater • Some common features include • Irregular terrain • Sinkhole or sinks (formed by groundwater slowly dissolving the bedrock often accompanied by collapse) • Striking lack of surface drainage (streams)
Stream incision, cave development and karst topography
Sinkholes in Florida