Surface Water
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Transcript Surface Water
Surface Water
Chapter 9
Surface water movement: Water Cycle
Earths water supply is constantly recycled
Surface Water Movement
1) Runoff
Water flowing down slope along Earth’s surface or
seep into the ground
Run off speed determined by slope of the hill
Ends up in a stream or lake, evaporate, or
accumulate into puddles
Movement
Seep into ground
Ground must have large enough pores – loose
soil
Evaporate
Fate of water: Run off or Seep
Certain characteristics will determine whether
not water will either seep into or become runoff
1) Vegetation
Vegetation allows for loose soil
Loose soil allows water to enter ground
Gardeners do not pack their soil
Fate of water
2) Rate of precipitation
Heavy:
soil clumps together closing pores
Fills up ground to quickly and water becomes runoff
Light:
allows water to gently slide through
Less erosion
Fate of Water
3) Soil Composition
Effects the waters holding capacity
Decayed organic matter (humus)
Creates the pores in soil – Increases retain ability
Minerals
Clay – fine mineral which clump together
• Few Spaces
Sand – large pores
Fate of Water
4) Slopes
Steep: allows for high runoff & little absorption
Little: low runoff and high absorption
Formation of Stream systems
Runoff
Surface water flows in thin sheets and
eventually collects in small channels
Runoff increases, channels widen and
become deeper and longer
Channels fill up again each time with rain
Channel can become a stream
Water sheds:
drainage basin
Land where all water drains into
Divide
High land area that separates watersheds
Mississippi Watershed
Stream Load
All the materials that the stream carries
Solution
Material that has been dissolved
Depends on area where the steam runs through
Erosion of rocks and dirt
Stream Load
Suspension
Small particles held up by the turbulence of stream
Clay, silt, sand
Depends on volume and velocity of water
Bed Load
Turbulence of water pushes heavy things
Pebbles and cobbles
Larger velocity – large objects
B/c of abrasion, rocks are smooth
Stream Velocity & Carrying Capacity
Discharge = width x depth x velocity
(m)
(m)
(m/s)
As discharge increases so does carrying
capacity
Floods
Water fills over the sides of a stream banks
Floodplain: broad flat area of land that
extends out from streams for excess flooding