Title: AP Environmental Science Water Resources (Ch 15)
1AP Environmental ScienceWater Resources(Ch 15)
2Waters Unique Properties
- Hydrogen Bonding
- Liquid over wide temperature range
- Changes temperature slowly (High heat capacity,
Cp) - High heat of evaporation
- Great dissolving power (nicknamed - Universal
Solvent) - Filters out ultraviolet radiation
- Expands when it freezes
3Global Water Distribution
http//ga.water.usgs.gov/edu/waterdistribution.htm
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4Hydroglogic Cycle
5Hydroglogic CycleWater storage -Ocean
97 of Global Water 3 salinity Only fresh
water evaporates, salt stays in ocean
6Hydroglogic CycleSurface water/runoff
Surface water - Precipitation that remains on
surface land and does not seep into
soil Runoff - The movement of surface water
across land to rivers, streams and
ultimately to the ocean Watershed or drainage
basin - An area of land where water runs off
into one stream or river.
7Hydroglogic CycleFerndale Wastershed
8Hydroglogic CycleStorage in Glaciers/icecaps
Glacial ice covers 10-11 percent of all
land 68.7 of global freshwater is in
glaciers/icecaps According to the National Snow
and Ice Data Center (NSIDC), if all glaciers
melted today the seas would rise about 230 feet
(70 meters) Largest surface area of any glacier
in the contiguous United States Emmons Glacier,
Washington (4.3 square miles or 11 square
kilometers)
9Hydroglogic CycleGroundwater storage
Water enters aquifers through infiltration in
recharge area
10Hydroglogic Cycle
- What is the general cycle of water on the globe?
- What drives the process?
- What parts of the system provide the ecological
service of pollution reduction?
11Use of Water Resources
Humans use about 54 of reliable runoff (regular,
predictable runoff, not including
floods) Agriculture - Irrigation Industry -
Cooling, ingredient in product Domestic -
Shower, toilets, lawn watering Power Plants -
Cooling
12Too Little Water
13Too Little WaterStrategies to Counteract
Divert surface water Remove ground water from
confined and unconfined aquifers Build dams and
reservoirs
14Too Little WaterConsequences of Removal of
Surface Water
- Surface water depletion - From diversion of water
from lakes or rivers - Rivers can endure 30 diversion
- Some rivers have as much as 70 diverted
- Causes wetlands to dry up
- Disrupts ecosystems
15Too Little WaterConsequences of Removal of
Aquifer Water
- Aquifer Depletion - Excessive removal of
groundwater lowers the water table - Can cause
- Subsidence - Sinking of land above aquifer (up to
10m in CA) - Sinkhole - More dramatic sinking of land
- Saltwater intrusion - Excessive removal of
freshwater causes saltwater to contaminate fresh
ground water
16Too Little WaterSaltwater intrusion
17Too Little WaterTrade-offs of Dams
18Too Little WaterSalinization
Salinization - The increasing build up of
salinity levels due to water diversion and
evaporation Remediation (both very expensive,
energy intensive) Distillation - Heating water
to force evaporation, leaving salt
behind Reverse osmosis - pushing water through
a membrane permeable to water, but not to salt
19Too Much WaterFlooding
Flooding is a natural process and can be
beneficial to humans Ancient Egypt relied on
flooding of rivers to bring nutrient rich river
sediment onto land to increase crop
yield Flooding increased by development
Building in flood plains Removal of trees -
trees naturally trap/store large amounts of
water from precipitation Ontario Canada -
Removal of trees for urbanization caused
annual runoff to increase from 10 to
43 Re-engineering rivers to flow straight -
doesnt dissipate energy of high flows as much
as curvy river
20Too Much Water Flooding
21Using Water Efficiently
- Reduce losses due to leakage
- Reform water laws
- Improve irrigation efficiency
- Improving manufacturing processes
- Water efficient landscaping (xeriscaping)
- Improve efficiencty of appliances
22Using Water EfficientlyXeriscaping
23Irrigation
24Salinization Waterlogging
25Salinization Waterlogging
26Desertification