Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Chapter 14 Groundwater Ms. Martel 14.1 Water in the Ground • Although some rain and precipitation becomes runoff, water also enters the ground where it is stored as groundwater. • Factors that affect the amount of water that seeps into the ground are: • Type of rock or soil on which the water falls. • Climate, topography, vegetation, and land use. Porosity • The amount of water that soil or rock can hold depends upon the amount of space, or pore space, between the grains of the material. • Porosity is the percent of a material’s volume that is pore space. • Factors that affect porosity are: • Particle shape. Rounded particles have more pore space. Flat materials or angular, have less pore space. • Sorting. Materials that are made up of particles that are the same size are well sorted. They are more porous. • Materials that are poorly sorted, ie. Are made up of a mixture of materials fill the porous spaces, reducing the porosity. Permeability • Permeability is the rate at which water or other liquids pass through the pore spaces of a rock. • Typically, permeability increases with grain size because large grained materials have larger pore spaces. • A material that water cannot pass through is called impermeable. • Some of the water that passes through a sediment or rock sticks to particles, forming a film of water. • This film is called capillary water. Measuring Porosity Mini-Lab The Water Table • When rain falls, it enters the pores in the soil, the water will then continue downward until it reaches impermeable material. • As more rain falls, the part of the ground where all pore spaces are filled is called the zone of saturation. • The upper surface of this zone is called the zone of saturation. • The zone just above the zone of saturation, is called the zone of aeration, because air can enter this region. • In between these two zones is the capillary fringe. • The interaction between the water and the soil is called capillary action. • The water table’s distance from the surface depends upon many factors: • Rainfall, amount of time that passes between rains, the season, the slope of the ground surface, the thickness of soil, and the climate. • The water table is important in several ways: • Seepage of water from the water from the water table, keeps the streams flowing between rains and maintains the water levels of swamps and lakes. • It also supplies drinking water to springs and human made wells. Ordinary Wells and Springs • Humans can reach groundwater that does not reach the surface by digging or driving wells into the ground. This is called an ordinary well. • On a hillside where the water table meets the surface, ground water may flow out as a spring. Artesian Formations • Permeable layers of rock and sediment that store and carry groundwater in enough quantity to supply wells are called aquifers. • An artesian formation is when an aquifer dips underground between impermeable rock layers. • Great quantities of water may enter the aquifers of artesian formations. This can create a lot of pressure. • Artesian formations may be broken by cracks in the cap rock called fissures. • Artesian springs rise through these cracks and sometimes form a desert oasis. Hot Springs, Geysers, and Fumaroles • Ground water can become heated if its is at a great depth. • Subsurface temperatures increase with depth, water from deep artesian wells or springs may be much warmer than normal. • In many recent regions of recent volcanic activity, igneous rocks near the surface are hot enough to boil water. • Sometimes volcanic gases make hot groundwater acidic. • A geyser is a hot spring that intermittently shoots columns of hot water and steam into the air. • It consists of long, vertical irregularly shaped tube that may extend hundreds of meters into the ground. • Because it is so far down into the Earth, water is heated by surrounding igneous rock etc. • This creates pressure, eventually the heat will rise to the top and steam is finally able to be released. • Where fairly recent volcanic eruptions have occurred, groundwater is released as steam, along with other gases, from fissures in the ground called fumaroles. • There are fumarole fields in Iceland and Japan. 14.2 Conserving Groundwater • About 50% of drinking water comes from ground water, humans must conserve and protect ground water supplies. Water Budgets • A water budget describes the income and spending of water for a region. • In a water budget, the income is rain or snow. • The spending includes water lost by use, by runoff, and by evapotranspiration. • If it rains during a time when the plants need little moisture, the extra moisture soaks in the soil, where it is stored between the grains of soil. • This is a time of soil recharge. • If the rain continues so that the soil becomes saturated the surplus water raises the water table or becomes part of a stream runoff. • If the need for moisture is greater than the rainfall, the plants can draw water from the soil water supply. • This is a time of soil water usage. • If the need for moisture continues to be greater than the rainfall, all of the water available in the soil may be used up. • When the water storage is gone, a water deficit occurs. Groundwater Conservation • In many regions, humans are using groundwater faster than natural processes can replenish supplies. • In addition, pollution threatens groundwater supplies. Overuse of Ground Water • When ground water supplies are depleted, the water table drops, thus lowering the water level in wells and springs. • This can cause them to go dry. • In coastal regions, this can cause the groundwater levels to fall below sea level, causing salt water to contaminate drinking water. This renders them unusable. • Subsidence occurs when the drop in groundwater causes the group levels to drop. • This compromises foundations of houses buildings, and underground pipes. Groundwater Pollution • Groundwater is recharged by rain seeping down through the soil. • Any pollution agent in the soil becomes part of the groundwater. • This includes oil from roads, nitrated from fertilizers, pesticides from plants, farm wastes, sewage from septic tanks etc. • Hazardous wastes are poisonous by products of some industrial processes. • Toxic chemicals from accidental spills, careless disposal, or rotting underground storage containers pollute the sol around them, and the groundwater its in contact with. • For years, toxic wastes were dumped with little care, and their locations were never recorded. • In some cases houses were built on these sites. • When the toxic waste was later discovered, families had to be moved. • As yet, no simple or inexpensive way to purify polluted groundwater is known. • The best measure we have available to us is prevention of pollution in the first place. 14.3 Groundwater and Geology Minerals in Groundwater • When water evaporates to become water vapor, it leaves impurities behind. • As groundwater passes through the lower soil layers or bedrock, it dissolves minerals. • Much of this dissolved mineral matter remains in the groundwater. • When ground water contains large amounts of ions from dissolved minerals, it is called hard water. • Calcium ions are the most commonly found ions in hard water. • The ions of hard water interfere with the use of water. • In hot water pipes, groundwater containing dissolved minerals leaves behind deposits called boiler scale. • Artesian water is usually harder than ordinary groundwater. It usually is able to dissolve more minerals because of the heat. • By contrast, ordinary groundwater is almost always harder than river water. Mineral Deposits by Groundwater • When groundwater that contains dissolved mineral cools or evaporates, mineral deposits are left behind. • Hot groundwater often leaves deposits of minerals in bedrock cracks and fissures. • Such mineral veins may contain quartz, calcite, gold, and silver. • Petrified wood is formed when minerals dissolved in groundwater replace the decaying wood of buried trees. • Perhaps the most important groundwater deposit is the cement that binds together sand grains and pebbles to form sedimentary rocks. Mineral Springs • A spring with a high concentration of mineral matter is called a mineral spring. The high mineral content of the water may be due to any of the factors below: • Water passes through rock containing easily-dissolved minerals. • Water contains large quantities of gases, such as CO2 and hydrogen sulfide, that form acids when mixed with water. • Water dissolves minerals more easily because its very hot. Caverns • Limestone is a common bedrock t hat dissolves more easily than some other types of rock. • Limestone is dissolved by the carbonic acid found in groundwater. • Frequently, limestone formations are split by fissures that run down from the surface and by cracks that run horizontally between the beds. • After thousands of years, the cracks between beds become so large that they form networks of underground tunnels. • These tunnels are called caverns, or caves.