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GROUNDWATER

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Subsidence in Venice, Italy. Parts of Venice have sunk more than 23 cm (approximately 9.2 inches) causing concern. CONTAMINATION. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: GROUNDWATER


1
GROUNDWATER
2
GROUNDWATER
  • Groundwater is subsurface water that fully
    saturate pore spaces of bedrock
  • The rate of movement of groundwater is gravity
    driven, varying between 0.6 inches per day (in
    sandstones) to several inches per year (in
    granitics)
  • The source of groundwater is rain and melt water
    infiltrating and percolating through
    fractures/pores in soil and bedrock

3
GROUNDWATER MOVEMENT AND SOURCES
4
How much groundwater is there?
  • Estimates of up to 4 million km3 for groundwater
  • Surface water 160,000 km3
  • Extraction of groundwater measured in acre-feet
    (the amount of water that covers one acre of
    land, one foot deep)
  • California extracts 17-20 million acre-feet (maf)
    per year
  • The Ogallala Aquifer in central United States
    produces 110 maf per year (317 billion gallons of
    water per year)

5
GROUNDWATER USAGE
6
WHO USES GROUNDWATER?
  • Almost all humans will use groundwater either
    directly pumping it into their own cistern or
    through major metropolitan water transportation
    systems.

7
Where is Groundwater Stored?
  • Groundwater is stored in rock bodies called
    aquifers.
  • A good aquifer provides both storage and
    transmittal of groundwater
  • Characteristics of aquifers
  • Porosity
  • The number and size of pore spaces, fractures,
    joints, in bedrock
  • Provides Storage for groundwater
  • Permeability
  • The connectedness of pore spaces, fractures,
    joints in bedrock
  • Provides Transmittal for groundwater

8
What Bedrock makes a Good Aquifer?
  • Any bedrock with both good porosity and good
    permeability
  • Unconsolidated sedimentary rock
  • Sandstones
  • Fractured igneous rocks (basalt) or jointed
    limestone

9
POROSITY and PERMEABILITY
POROSITY
PERMEABILITY
10
What if bedrock only has good porosity or only
permeability?
  • Bedrock with good porosity but poor permeability
    are call aquicludes or aquitards
  • These types of bedrock may store water, but
    cannot transmit it.
  • Unfractured igneous rock
  • Metamorphic rock
  • Bedrock with high amounts of clay
  • Shales, claystones, mudstones, siltstones

11
What Is An Unconfined Aquifer?
  • An unconfined aquifer has little to no overlying
    sedimentary layers.
  • There is no confining layer of clay or other
    impermeable sedimentary layers
  • The largest unconfined aquifer in the United
    States is the Ogallala Aquifer which extends from
    Texas through Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska and
    North Dakota, plus parts of Wyoming, Colorado and
    New Mexico.

12
UNCONFINED AQUIFER
13
OGALLALA AQUIFER
14
What is a Confined Aquifer?
  • Confined Aquifers are usually sandwiched between
    two non-permeable layers.
  • The confining layers provide pressure on the
    aquifer, allowing the groundwater to rise to the
    surface under its own energy no pumping
    required Artesian Wells
  • Largest Artesian well in United States is the Big
    Spring in Missouri
  • Produces 300-400 million gallons of water/day

15
CONFINED AQUIFER
16
ARTESIAN WELLS
17
Decorative Waterwheel placed over original
Artesian Wells in SFV (Sportsmans
Lodge) Historic springs exist many places along
Ventura Boulevard. This is why the Spaniards
established California's first highway, El Camino
Real, along this long used pathway.
Photo in Archives of The Museum of the San
Fernando Valley -2008 - Photo by Gerald Fecht
18
Big Spring, Missouri
19
AQUIFER ZONES
  • The Vadose Zone Zone of Aeration
  • This is the upper zone of an aquifer
  • Between each pore space and within each joint or
    fracture, both air and water can be stored
  • The Phreatic Zone Zone of Saturation
  • This is the lower zone of an aquifer
  • Between each pore space and within each joint or
    fracture, only water is stored.
  • Represents the zone within the aquifer designated
    as true groundwater
  • Water Table
  • This is the upper limit of the Phreatic Zone
    within an aquifer
  • This is the boundary between the Vadose and
    Phreatic Zone
  • Depth of water table determined by wells they
    will fill to the level of the water table
  • Lakes, springs, streams are surface expressions
    of the water table

20
VADOSE AND PHREATIC ZONES
Phreatic zone
21
DIAGRAM OF AN AQUIFER
22
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23
  • California
  • Statewide Aquifers

24
LOS ANGELES GROUNDWATER BASINS
25
San Fernando Valley/San Gabriel Valley Groundwater
26
San Francisco Area Groundwater
27
Ventura County Groundwater
28
GROUNDWATER MANAGEMENT CHALLENGES
  • Laws
  • Water Table Depletion
  • Ground Subsidence
  • Contamination

29
Laws on Groundwater Usage
  • Only two states of USA have no laws regarding the
    use of groundwater Texas and California
  • The only requirement for the water to be of
    beneficial use
  • Recent attempts in Californias Legislature to
    regulate groundwater have been met with strong
    resistance from many groups farmers,
    municipalities included
  • Most recent water bill passed has some
    restrictions, but groundwater still not regulated

30
GROUNDWATER WITHDRAWALS
31
WATER TABLE DEPLETION
  • Water table depletion can be the result of
    natural droughts as well as human activity
  • Over-pumping wells can result in temporary and
    permanent lowering of the water table

32
NORMAL CONDITIONS FOR WATER TABLE
33
CONDITIONS FOR WATER TABLE DEPLETION
34
DRAWDOWN EFFECT AND CONE OF DEPRESSION WITH
RECOVERY
35
DRAWDOWN NO RECOVERY
lowered
36
GROUND SUBSIDENCE
  • Over pumping groundwater can result in the
    sinking of overlying layers.
  • Groundwater acts to buoy up overlying
    sedimentary layers remove the water and all the
    pore spaces, fractures, and joints can collapse

37
SUBSIDENCE
Picture from the San Joaquin Valley showing the
amount of land subsidence since 1925 due to
aggressive groundwater pumping
38
SUBSIDENCE IN CALIFORNIA
39
SUBSIDENCE IN CALIFORNIA
40
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41
SUBSIDENCE IN TEXAS
42
CONTAMINATION
  • Groundwater contamination comes in several ways
  • Landfills and septic tanks
  • Agriculture
  • Industrial
  • Urban
  • Toxic wastes
  • Salt water intrusion

43
SOURCES OF CONTAMINATION
44
LANDFILL CONTAMINATION
45
GAS TANK CONTAMINATION
46
Septic Tank Contamination
47
AGRICULTURE CONTAMINATION
  • Pesticides
  • Insecticides
  • Herbicides
  • Fertilizers
  • Animal Waste

48
AGRICULTURAL CONTAMINATION
49
INDUSTRIAL CONTAMINATION
50
San Fernando Valley/San Gabriel Valley
Groundwater contamination
51
San Francisco Area Groundwater Basin Contamination
52
SALT WATER INTRUSION
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