Transcript Quiz

What is it?
Subterranean water that saturates the Earth’s crust just below the surface
How does water get underground?
• Cracks, crevices in rock
• Spaces between grains in the soil
• Rocks/beds that store and transmit
groundwater in sufficient quantity to supply
wells are called aquifers
– 22% of all fresh water flows as groundwater
How does rock flow through soil?
• The only open spaces for water to flow are
between individual grains, called pore
spaces
• Porosity: percentage of the total volume
that is taken up by pores
Porosity
• How loosely
packed are
the grains?
• Higher in
sedimentary
rocks
Permeability
• Are the pores connected?
• How big are they?
• How torturous is the path to be traveled?
• Some cave systems are so permeable that
people can move through them
The (Ground) Water Table
Zone of aeration
“coke” table (aka water table)
Zone of saturation
The Effect of the Water Table
• If you drill a well below the water table, it
will fill to the level of the water table
– Straw in pop
• It forms a surface roughly parallel to the
ground surface
• And it moves downhill under gravity and is
exposed at rivers and lakes
Aquifers
• Rocks/beds that store and transmit
groundwater in sufficient quantity to supply
wells are called aquifers
– Confined
– Unconfined
Balancing Recharge and Discharge
• Normal
“Problem”
Balancing Recharge and Discharge
• Extreme
Problems
– saltwater
intrusion
Land Subsidence
• Groundwater commonly flows through
spaces in sediment (sand and gravel)
• Pumping groundwater can cause grains to
rearrange and “compact”
• Irreversible
• Permanent
damage to
reservoirs
San Joaquin Valley
• CA 1st in agriculture
– Central Valley = 25% of
nation’s food, 1% of land
– “Groundwater mining”
• Valley is filled with river
sediments and clays
Land
Subsidence
Darn
Kids…
– First noted here in 1935
– >1/2 of San Joaquin Valley (5,200
mi2) irrigable land has sunk by 1’
Groundwater and Erosion
• Recall how water is a great dissolver
– Rainwater contains carbon dioxide which
therefore is present in groundwater
– Carbon dioxide acts to dissolve limestone
– Carbonic acid (COKE) causes faster reactions
• Therefore the passage of groundwater
through limestone can make HUGE caves
Just Below Water
Table
• Water coming down
from above can
evaporate when it
reaches opening
– Stalactite
• Water that drips
down to base can
form
– Stalagmite