390 likes | 694 Views
Water Security. Six Unique Properties of H 2 O. hydrogen protoxide, dihydrogen oxide High boiling point High heat of vaporization High heat capacity Superior solvent High surface tension Expands when freezes. Hydrologic Cycle. The Hydrologic Cycle. Water on Earth. Water Budget.
E N D
Six Unique Properties of H2O hydrogen protoxide, dihydrogen oxide • High boiling point • High heat of vaporization • High heat capacity • Superior solvent • High surface tension • Expands when freezes
Water Budget • Water budget: relationship between evaporation, condensation, and storage of water within the Earth system
Surface Water • Watershed basins • Dams & Reservoirs • Floods • Runoff
Groundwater • Confined and unconfined aquifers • Aquiclude • Water table • Spring
Uses of Water • Withdrawal • Consumptive vs. non-consumptive uses • Instream use • Water Use sectors • Agriculture (60% consumption) • Rural domestic use (59%) • Municipal and Commercial (29%) • Industry (13%) • Power plant cooling
Water Supply Management • Supply Enhancement • Storage (dams, impounds) • Advantages and disadvantages of impoundments • Inter-basin transfer • Cloud seeding • Groundwater mining • Intrusion, Subsidence, Surface water depletion • Harvesting (forests, icebergs) • Wastewater reclamation • Desalinization
Water Demand Management • Pricing • Metering • Pressure reduction • Restrictions • Gray water • Irrigation technologies
Water Pollution • Human additions of undesirable substances to the environment • Quantity = f( quality) • Point source • Sewers • Industrial outfall • Non-point source • Soil erosion • Air pollution fallout • Surface runoff • Groundwater pollution
Major Forms of Pollutants • Organisms • Organic Matter • Inorganic Particulates • Organic Chemicals • Radioactivity • Thermal Pollution
Organisms • Bacteria, viruses, parasites • 25,000 deaths per day in LDCs • coliform bacteria • guardia lamblia • cryptospiridium • schistosomiasis
Organic Matter • Surface runoff, industries, sewage • Oxygen-demanding wastes • Biological oxygen demand
Inorganic Particulates • Sediments = >50% • Turbine, pump damage • Reservoir filling • Flooding • Fisheries damage • Beach erosion • Sediments carry attached pollutants
Inorganic Particulates • Chemicals from industries, mines, farms, urban runoff • Salts • Calcium carbonate- hard water • Acids • Toxic metals • Chromium • Selenium • Mercury
Inorganic Particulates • Nutrients • Phosphorus (phosphate) • Nitrogen (nitrate, ammonia) • Methemoglobinemia • Eutrophication (vs. oligotrophic) • Cultural eutrophication- red tides from human sewage wastes • Red tides • Algae blooms
Organic Chemicals • Oil and gas • Underground storage tanks • Plastics, detergents, solvents • Trihalomethane (chloroform) • Synthetic organic chemicals • Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs)
Radioactivity • Mining • Fallout • Nuclear plants
Thermal Pollution • Power plants • Industries
Degradation • Dilution is the Solution to Pollution • Biochemical decay • Sedimentation and accumulation
Effects of Water Pollution • Bacteria • typhoid fever, cholera, bacterial dysentery, enteritis • Viruses • infections hepatitis, polio • Parasitic protozoa • amoebic dysentery, giardia • Parasitic worms • schistosomiasis
Groundwater Pollution • Sources • Direct injection wells • Leachate • Underground storage tanks • Landfills • Septic tanks • Agriculture • Surface impoundments • Abandoned waste sites • Road salting • Land application of sludge • Mining activities
Ocean Pollution • Sewage • Oil and gas • Plastic (fishing gear) • Lost nets
Treatment Methods • Primary- removal of solids • Secondary- activated bacteria & oxygen • Tertiary- charcoal, sand filters, ozone, chlorine • Clean Water Acts (1972, 1977, 1985) • Safe Drinking Water Act (1986)