1 / 11

Ground Water

Ground Water. Ground Water. Water that exists beneath the ground Can be contained in soil or bedrock. (Groundwater, 2010). (Waller, 2010). Groundwater in Connecticut. Groundwater = source of drinking water for about 1 million people in CT (1/3 pop)

derica
Download Presentation

Ground Water

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ground Water

  2. Ground Water • Water that exists beneath the ground • Can be contained in soil or bedrock (Groundwater, 2010) (Waller, 2010)

  3. Groundwater in Connecticut • Groundwater = source of drinking water for about 1 million people in CT (1/3 pop) • 600 community, 2500 non-community, and 250,000 private wells • Aquifers relatively shallow (300 ft) • DEP estimates ~90% drinkable • Over 5,500 contaminated sites • 50-70 new contaminated wells discovered each year Stratified drift aquifers = most productive (GWPC, 2010)

  4. Soil Water • Unsaturated Zone- area where soil is dry • Saturated Zone- area where soil holds water • Water Table- boundary between UZ and SZ • Porosity- amount of pore space (air) within soil • Infiltration- when water enters soil • Percolation- when gravity moves water within soil • Compaction- reduces porosity and stops infiltration and percolation. Runoff occurs on compacted soils.

  5. Aquifers • Area beneath the ground containing water • May be pumped for human consumption • Confined- impervious layer on top = harder to contaminate & recharge • Unconfined- generally open to contamination and surface water recharge • The deeper/more confined, the cleaner & longer it takes to recharge

  6. (Waller, 2010)

  7. Wells • Well- structure which pumps water from an aquifer • Artesian Well- wells that discharge water above ground because of pressure below the ground • Cone of depression- lowered water table around a well “When the well is dry, we know the worth of water.” -BENJAMIN FRANKLIN

  8. (Waller, 2010)

  9. Connection to Surface Water • Ground water is recharged by infiltrated surface water • Streams may or may not contribute to or take from ground water (gaining/ losing streams) • Springs occur when aquifers are exposed (USGS, 2010)

  10. Contamination • Groundwater may become contaminated by anything that enters the soil or water • Nonpoint sources- indirect source of contamination i.e. agricultural waste • Point source- source of contamination from direct point on landscape i.e. effluent pipe (Waller, 2010)

  11. Works Cited “Groundwater Hydrology for Well Contractors.” National Ground Water Association. Online Available: http://www.ngwa.org/public/gwbasics/unconformities.aspx Retrieved 4 November 2010. Groundwater Protection Council. “Connecticut Groundwater Conditions” Online available: http://www.gwpc.org/e-library/documents/state_fact_sheets/connecticut.pdf Retreived 5 October 2010. USGS. “The effects of groundwater development on groundwater flow and from surface water bodies.” Online available: http://pubs.usgs.gov/circ/circ1186/html/gw_effect.html retrieved 8 November 2010. Waller, Rodger A. “Groundwater and the Rural Homeowner.” US Geological Survey. Online available: http://pubs.usgs.gov/gip/gw_ruralhomeowner/ Retrieved 9 November 2010.

More Related