Water resources

 

Most abundant, but also most essential of resources.  Needed to drink (potable), washing (hygene), energy (hydroelectric), industry.

 

Distribution very different matter  as either too little - drought

                                                                          too much - floods

 

Either causes problems

 

Water Use

 

 

Domestic   -   each person uses minimum 190gals/year just to survive.             washing etc extras

 

Agriculture - irrigation

 

Industrial

 

Use in each sector depends on country's economy

                                    Domestic       Agric              Industry

            US                  10                    40                    50

            Japan              10                    70                    20

            Ger/UK         20-30               10                    60-70

            India              5                      85-90               5-10

 

 

 

Global distribution of Water

 

1.36 x 1021 km3   97.2 % in oceans, 2.15% ice caps - but inaccessible

 

Our requirements met by 0.65% remaining

 

                        .001% atmosphere

                        .0001 rivers streams

                        .009 % freshwater lakes

                        .008% saline lakes and inland seas

                        .005% soil water (vadose)

                        .31% shallow ground water (less than 1km)

                        .31% deep ground water

 

 

 

Global precipation

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Cycling of water in the Earth :  the hydrologic cycle

 

Water one of the few earth resources that is renewable

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Evaporation

 

 

Precipitation  - rain, snow, hail. Factors effecting precipitation

                        collection of precipitation

 

 

 

Runnoff  rivers streams and lakes  -

                        Factors effecting ratio between runnoff and infiltration

 

Infiltration - vadose and groundwater zones

 

Evapotranspiration - roots take up soil moisture and is exhaled through leaves.  A large tree may transpire 2 - 300 gals/day!! 

 

 

 

Groundwater

 

Major source of potable water.

 

Porosity and permeability of rocks. 

 

Aquifers and aquitards

 

Water table

            Phreatic zone,  vadose zone

           

 

 

 

 

            Slope of water table (head) and flow of groundwater (in S florida not

             much slope natural flow rates about 1-2m/day)

 

 

Springs where water table  meets the ground surface  - discharge - and lowering of water table

                                                Head and discharge (also permeability)

 

 

 

 

 

            Lakes and water table level

 

 

                        also rivers

 

 

            Recharge of water table and seasonal fluctuations

 

 

 

            Aquitards(aquicludes) and perched water tables

 

 

 

 

Wells and water table

 

Cone of depression of water table around regularly pumped well

 

 

 

Drawdown (in S Florida domestic well few inches; well fields 7-8ft)

 

 

 

 

Artesian Wells

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

            Florida situation-  Floridan aquifer and wells at John Pennekamp and             Chekika park

 

 

            Oases

 

 

 

Contamination of groundwater

 

Sources of contamination: 

            human/animal wastes (bacteria); industrial wastes , gas stations,             factories etc (toxic wastes)

 

 

 

Flow of groundwater - filtering action, time of flow to discharge point

 

 

 

Limestone (Karst) Aquifers

 

Solution of limestone; developement of caves

 

 

 

 

Surface drainage in karst areas - swallow holes and sink holes

 

 

 

Groundwater flow in karst areas  - conduit flow in caves

 

 

 

 

Surface Water

 

Drainage patterns and drainage basins 

 

 

 

divides

 

Flow in streams and rivers

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Stream gauging

 

 

 

 

 

Hydrographs

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Importance in design of dams etc

 

 

Dams

Primary purpose: control of water for domestic/agricultural purposes

Secondary:  benefit in some cases - capacity to generate electricity if discharge and head sufficiently great.

 

Design of dams

 

 

 

 

Use of water

 

 

Usage (withdrawal) and consumption

 

usage (withdrawal) -  quantity physically extracted

consumption – that portioj of withdrawal removed from system – withheld from returning to source

 

US usage 6130 liters(1620 gallons) per person per day.  Household 400 liters (105 gallons).   Total usage needed to maintain lifestyle often overlooked.

 

 

 

Drinking water

Treatment:

            filtration, "scrubbing",   addition of chlorine for disinfectant purposes,             fluoridation

 

Irrigation

To grow crops in areas of low rainfall.  Now 42% of US usage  - more in west than east due to rainfall patterns (80-90% in India and Mexico).  Consumes vast amount of water (due to evaporation)

 

Industry and mining

 

85% returned (therefore less consumption than for irrigation).  Problem is quality of that water – pollution

 

 

 

Hydroelectric power

Dominates US water usage, but consumes little.  In US most of potential developed. Rest of world could develop 7 times present capacity.  Problem is often that power isn’t generated where most needed

 

Desalinization of water

 

In island and coastal communities desalinization of seawater may make sense, although expensive.

Distillation

Electrodialysis

Reverse Osmosis

Freezing

 

Disposal of brine an issue as is a contaminant

 

Saudi Arabia, Curaçao, Catalina Islance (California)

 

 

 

Ownership of water - water law

 

Eastern US:   rule is Riperian Law   -    right of every landowner to make reasonable use of water. Abundance and scarcities shared equally (nobody upstream can legally take all water for example) Exception municipalities get preferred treatment in time of scarcity (eminent domain)

 

Western US:  rule is Prior appropriation  whoever got permission to use water first has first rights to it - ie oldest appropriation honored first.   Grew out of 1849 gold rush.

(Los Angeles bought rights to Owen's Valley water in 1900's environmentalists and OV residents say LA is "stealing" their water, but LA sauyst by "prior appropriation" their use is legal)

 

 

Groundwater rights

Legal decisions on groundwater more difficult than surface because less obvious.  Many early descisions made on assumption of unlimited quantities

 

 

Environmental water rights

Increasingly damage to environment of misuse of water recognized.  Human needs do not now automatically prevail over natural needs.  Endangered Species Act, Wetlands Act  have been used to restore

 

 

 

Water supply problems

Drought

 

Groundwater depletion

Sustained extraction that exceeds recharge will cause a problem.  Ogallala aquifer (Miocene gravel) of High Plains depleted by 150,000 wells. 

Not just US but a global problem

 

Ground subsidence

Extraction of water can lower not just water table, but land.  New Orleans, Ganges delta (Bangla Desh), Santa Clara Valley(California), Houston-Galveston.

 

Soil deterioration

salinization and alkalinazation in irrigated arid regions, desertification.

 

Salt Water Intrusion

Contamination in coastal aquifers. Effect of urbanization - increased drawdown because of use; reduced  recharge (infiltration) because of roads, buildings, storm sewers  intrusions, etc.  Result in "salt water intrusions"

 

 

 

some Florida Water issues

 

Surface water system in South Florida

Okeechobee and Everglades system;  pollution problem in Everglades; Everglades restoration.

Kissimmee River project

 

 

Biscayne and Floridan aquifers

Geology of Biscayne aquifer, karstification increases porosity

Hawthorn aquitard

Flow patterns in Biscayne aquifer

 

Contamination problems

High level of water table;  gas stations, dry cleaners, industry all  polluters

 

Municipal land fills west of urban area

 

Salt water intrusions

 

Ground subsidence and sinkholes

Central Florida region