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Lecture 19 Ground Water (2) Ground water storage Porosity Water retention and yield Storage change.

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Presentation on theme: "Lecture 19 Ground Water (2) Ground water storage Porosity Water retention and yield Storage change."— Presentation transcript:

1 Lecture 19 Ground Water (2) Ground water storage Porosity Water retention and yield Storage change

2 Ground Water Storage Aquifers are reservoirs for water storage Water moves very slowly in aquifers acting as water pipelines The age of aquifers ranges from a few weeks to several tens of thousand years, depending on the depth and size.

3 Porosity Figure 6.10, WR

4 Terms to Remember Porosity: percentage of the total volume of a rock or soil which is occupied by interstices or voids Original interstices: pores which were created at the time of origin of the rock Secondary interstices: pores results from subsequent actions of geological, climatic and biotic forces or factors upon the original rock, such as faults and joints enlarged by weathering and solution Effective porosity: total porosity less the portion of interstices which are not interconnected with other and are hydrologically inert.

5 Porosity vs. soil/rock type Table 5.1, WRGround Water

6 Specific yield and specific retention Figure 5.3, WRGround Water

7 Terms to Remember Ground Water Specific yield: the volume of water than can freely drain from a saturated rock or soil under the influence of gravity, usually expressed in percentage of the total aquifer volume Specific retention: the percentage of the total aquifer volume which is retained by the surface tension as films around the individual grains and in capillary openings.

8 Ground Water Storage Change Infiltration of precipitation Seepage from lakes, rivers, and even oceans Inflow from adjacent aquitards and aquifers Artificial recharge (irrigation, wells, pipelines, sewers, etc.) ΔЅ=Q r -Q d ΔЅ = storage change per unit time Q r = recharge per unit time Q d = discharge per unit time Recharge: Discharge: Evaporation Spring flow and seepage into surface water bodies Leakage to aquitards and other aquifers Artificial extraction

9 Self reading Characteristics of change in unconfined aquifers (WR Chapter 5.4.3) Characteristics of change in confined aquifers (WR Chapter 5.4.3)


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