Groundwater & Wetlands Groundwater: Subsuface water below the water table, which is the depth where soil becomes water saturated (i.e. all pore spaces.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Water Table and Aquifers
Advertisements

Water Resources.
Water Resources Section #1: Chapter 11.
Water Underground.
28.1 The Hydrologic Cycle Hydrological cycle: natural circulation of water from the oceans to the air, then to the ground, then to the oceans and then.
Ground Water. Today’s Plan: Groundwater Groundwater Aquifer / aquitard Water table Groundwater flow Wells & springs.
Water Terms
Add Main Topic Here Created by Educational Technology Network
Chapter 15 & 16 Review. Question # 1 The rock and other material that a stream carries is known as its ….. Stream load.
Wetlands  Wetland – “those areas that are inundated or saturated by surface or groundwater at a frequency and duration sufficient to support, and that.
LEQ: How does water move through underground layers of soil and rock?
Groundwater The Unseen Part of the Water Cycle Salt Groundwater Ground Water Reservoir The present-day surface hydrologic cycle. The numbers in parentheses.
Chapter 11: Water.
Groundwater. In the U.S. we use: 400 million gallons of water a day to drink 450 billion gallons of water a day in our homes, agriculture and industry.
Water.
Groundwater.
THIS IS With Host... Your Vocabulary Streams & Rivers (2-1) Wetland Environments (2-3) Water Underground (2-5) Groundwater Diagrams.
Groundwater Dr. R. B. Schultz. Groundwater Groundwater is water, which originates from the infiltration of fluids through the soil profile and accumulates.
Freshwater and Society Module 1, part B. Developed by: Munson, Richards, Svendsen Updated: Dec. 30, 2003 U1-m1b-s2 Watersheds
Water Resources A river runs through it…. Water: The Universal Solvent One of the most valuable properties of water is its ability to dissolve. This makes.
PG.81 Sources of water. Water on earth All water on earth constitutes the hydrosphere 97% is stored in oceans 2% in glaciers 1% lakes, streams, ground.
Water.
1 GROUNDWATER HYDROLOGY AND CONTAMINANT TRANSPORT CEVE 518 P.C. de Blanc C.J. Newell 1.Hydrologic Cycle and Water Distribution 2.Soil Horizons 3.Aquifers.
Ground Water Write everything in PURPLE!.
Water as a Resource Chapter 10. The Global Water Budget Consider water as a resource because it is important for domestic use, agriculture, and industry.
Construction Technology: Substructure DW57 34 Outcome 2 Methods of groundwater control.
Groundwater & Wetlands
Wetlands Characteristic hydric soil and hydrophytic vegetation as signs of frequent surface saturation or inundation. Many types of wetlands: (Dodds, 2002;
WATER ON AND UNDER GROUND. Objectives Define and describe the hydrologic cycle. Identify the basic characteristics of streams. Define drainage basin.
Groundwater Systems.
Fig. 16-CO, p Study Guide Chapter Explain how the groundwater system operates. 2.Describe the zones of aeration and saturation. 3.Locate the.
Classroom presentations to accompany Understanding Earth, 3rd edition prepared by Peter Copeland and William Dupré University of Houston Chapter 12 The.
Groundwater. Groundwater is water that completely fills (saturates) the pore spaces of soil or rock formation below the water table. Water that shares.
Chapter 9 – Part 2 Water Resources.
Streams & Rivers Q. What is runoff? A. Water that flows over the ground surface rather than soaking into the ground. Q. What is runoff? A. Water that flows.
6. Drainage basins and runoff mechanisms Drainage basins Drainage basins The vegetation factor The vegetation factor Sources of runoff Sources of runoff.
Water In what ways have you used water today? How much water is used to make a 1KG burger?
Groundwater Depletion.
Groundwater.
LO: To describe and explain the features of artesian basins and aquifers. To explain the balance between extraction and recharge of these stores. To outline.
Groundwater Where is groundwater located and how do humans.
Groundwater Geol 1110 Newell guest lecture 3/28/16.
Water Terms
Water Cycle Basics. What is a Watershed? An area of land that drains all of the streams and rainfall to a common outlet such as a river or bay.
Ground Water. Today’s Plan: Groundwater Groundwater Aquifer / aquitard Water table Groundwater flow Wells & springs Groundwater contamination.
Groundwater. Groundwater: the water that lies beneath the surface, filling the pore space between grains in bodies of sediment Groundwater is a major.
Groundwater Groundwater • •
The Structure of the Hydrosphere
GROUNDWATER HYDRAULICS ECV 5406 NAME : SHARINA BINTI SULAIMAN MATRIK. NO : GS69364.
Water and the Atmosphere Chapter 1 Fresh Water
Water Terms
Groundwater Protection in the Southern Willamette Valley
CON 101 Waters Frank Smith ><<{{{(‘>
Sentinel Molecular Diagnostics for Crop Agroterrorism
Groundwater & Wetlands
Structures of the Hydrosphere Labs
DO NOW Pick up notes and Review #27. Do you have any labs to turn in?
Water.
Fresh Water.
What to expect, what to know…
Water Terms
Groundwater (Part 1) Groundwater as an erosional agent
Streams Hydrodynamics
Streams Hydrodynamics
Groundwater.
Running Water and Groundwater
Groundwater.
Groundwater.
Hydrosphere: Water Distribution
The Hydrologic Cycle and Groundwater
Presentation transcript:

Groundwater & Wetlands Groundwater: Subsuface water below the water table, which is the depth where soil becomes water saturated (i.e. all pore spaces are water filled). Wetland: Areas of the surface soil layer that receive groundwater (i.e. the water table is near or at the surface; or land covered with shallow water) with great enough frequency to establish characteristic soils and plant communities. Water gain within a watershed is the balance of precipitation and evapotranspiration.

New Groundwater Formation / percolation Intensity/duration of precipitation. Vegetation cover and evapotranspiration. Topography and recharge zones. (Infiltration rate is called recharge.) Extent of vadose (unsaturated) Zone Sheet flow (runoff) versus infiltration - Soil texture & permeability (courser the more infiltration) - Soil water content & holding capacity (high values may impede infiltration)

Soil Overview mm mm 0.2 – 2 mm Soil Texture Triangle: Composition results from the type of geological substrata (bedrock), weathering climate, age of development, vegetation type. Layers (horizons) are observed with depth, from more organics at the surface to less weathered bedrock fragments at depth. Profile of Soil Horizons: Organics?

= Geologic substrata = vadose zone / unsaturated Subsurface Habitats: = groundwater Aquifer = groundwater that is contiguous (connected) over an area. They may be unconfined from the surface, or confined from the surface by an impermeable or semi-permeable geologic strata (layer) called an aquitard.

Porosity = amount of water held in a volume of sediment; fraction of sediment volume as pores and fractures; often relates to permeability but not always (e.g., biofilms; clays; disconnected channels). High Recharge: (Storms; Flat terrain; High permeability)

Groundwater Flow Permeability will greatly influence flow: - Finer & consolidated slower - Courser & unconsolidated faster - Channels faster Darcey’s Law: flow rate in porous material increases with pressure and shorter flow path. -Tortuosity (length of flow path) - Pressure (hydraulic head) Which diagram illustrates a habitat with faster flow rate and why? Assume equal hydraulic head.

Hydraulic Head (Δh) & Gradient (HG) All three wells are in the groundwater. Explain the difference in “Artesian” flow.

Aquifer Flow and Oasis Formation:

Limestone Aquifers & Karst Topography Time

Notice that rock more resistant to weathering dissolution remains as elevated features (hills & cliffs). Caves, waterfalls, cinotes, and vanishing streams are some features of the karst landscape.

(Fig 4.5; Dodds, 2002) * Pumped wells can deplete groundwater. * There may be connections with seawater.

Groundwater Meets Surface Water Stream and lake hydrodynamics is influenced by ground water. How it is influenced depends on the water table level; hence, precipitation. Wet seasons when there’s a high water, groundwater may feed the stream in addition to runoff events. Dry seasons when the water table is low, sheet flow runoff may be the only source of stream flow, in which case the stream feeds (recharges) the groundwater. Wet season Dry Season

Zone of surface water (lakes or streams) and groundwater interaction

Groundwater & Hyporheic Life Microbes Rule! (bacteria, fungi, protists) Biofilms are fed by DOC. Important microbial transformations of elements depending on oxygen supply. Hyporheose: –Hyporheic Zone is an ecotone. –Biofilms my have characteristic of both. –Stream fauna may be throughout. –Unique fauna exists (dark adapted, Family Bogidiellidae ). –Lots still to be discovered!

Wetlands Characteristic hydric soil and hydrophytic vegetation as signs of frequent surface saturation or inundation. Many types of wetlands: (Dodds, 2002; Table 4.3) –Salt-marshes and (temperate, seawater influence) –Mangrove forests (tropical, seawater influence) –Tidal & non-tidal freshwater marshes –Deepwater (cypress) swamps –Northern (bogs & tundra) wetlands –Riparian forests/wetlands –Man-made (rice paddies & bioremediation) Function as nutrient and sediment traps; slow runoff and facilitate recharge; most are highly productive.

Global Distribution (Matthews, 1993) Coastal Mangrove Depressional Peatland bog

Wetland ecosystem types are based on hydrologic regime, climate, geomorphology, nutrient input and vegetation. (Dodds, 2002; Table 4.5) Geomorphic: Peatlands; Coastal; Riverine; Depressional. Hydrologic Regime: –Permanence, predictability (e.g. tidal), seasonality –Primary water source: Precipitation; low throughput (ombrotrophic) Riverine; potentially high throughput (minerotrophic) Groundwater Climate determines the balance of precipitation and evapotranspiration. (E.g., much less precipitation is required for tundra wetlands than that for a tropical savanna wetland.)

Human Impacts on Groundwaters; Streams and Wetlands Groundwater or surface pumping: –agriculture –industry –drinking waters. Clearing riparian forests & wetlands Draining and filling for “development”. Damming and flooding Diversion channels for water supply.

Levee

Vanishing Florida Wetlands