unit 7 ch 11 s1 water resources
TRANSCRIPT
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Chapter 11, Section 1: Water Resources
Standards: SEV5e
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The Water Cycle The same amount of
water had been on the planet for billions of years.
The water you drink today is the same water dinosaurs drank!
Water is a renewable resource that is recycled through the water cycle.
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The Water Cycle Evaporation
Water evaporates when heated by sun (leaves salts behind)
Transpiration- water evaporation from plants
Condensation As water vapor rises it cools,
condenses, and collects on dust particles in the sky (condensation nuclei) and forms clouds.
Precipitation When clouds get too full of water
they drop it as precipitation
Infiltration and Runoff Water either
Infiltrates the soil- pass slowly through soil to recharge an aquifer
Runs off into a nearby lake or stream.
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How much water is on Earth? 97% is saltwater in
oceans & saltwater lakes.
3% is freshwater
2% frozen in ice caps & glaciers (unusable)
1% groundwater & surface water (usable)
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How is our usable water distributed? Surface water
Groundwater
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What is surface water? Fresh water above
ground.
Important for
Drinking water
Transportation of goods via ships
Irrigation
Aquaculture
Power for industry
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What are the types of Surface Water? Rivers & streams
Fast moving Cold, highly oxygenated Insect larvae, trout, long narrow
plants, algae
Lakes & ponds Slow moving Warm, less oxygenated Bass, catfish, cattails, leeches
Wetlands Covered with water most of the
year Absorb and slow water flow Filter pollutants & sediment Provide breeding ground for
water birds, shellfish, fish
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What is a river system? Streams form in higher
elevations from rainfall or melting snow.
As they move downhill they combine with other streams to form rivers.
Streams that feed rivers are called tributaries.
This interconnection of streams to form rivers is the river system
Ex: McEachern creek flows to Noses Creek to Sweetwater Creek to Chattahoochee River
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Lake Lanier
West Point
Lake
Walter F.
George
Lake
Lake
Seminole
Apalachicola
River
Flint River
Chattahoochee
River
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What is a watershed?
Area of land that drains into a stream/river.
Pollution anywhere in the watershed could end up in that river.
We live in the Chattahoochee River watershed
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What is groundwater Fresh water stored
underground in aquifers
Most fresh water resources are stored here
Aquifer- area underground with rocks & gravel that have spaces where water can accumulate.
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What is the water table? Top layer of water in
aquifer where soil is saturated.
In wet regions the water table may reach surface and create a natural spring.
If aquifer is confined by layer of rock may be under pressure and squirt out of ground as artesian well
In desert regions water table is usually very deep.
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Ogallala Aquifer One of the largest in the world. Supplies 1/3 of groundwater used in
the U.S. Used mostly for irrigating crops. Now being used at increasing rate
(faster than can be recharged) Water table has dropped 100 ft in
some places of Ogallala. Wetlands rely on water table of
Ogallala where it comes to surface. If water table decreases, wetlands
dry out, water birds (sandhillcranes) lose feeding & breeding site.
Farmers are trying to limit their use by switching to crops that require less water (wheat & sorghum)
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What factors affect aquifer recharge rate?
Porosity Percentage of total volume of a
rock that has spaces Water is stored in these pore
spaces More porous the rock, the more
water it can hold.
Permeability Ability of rock or soil to allow
water to flow through it. Sand- high permeability- lets
water flow through quickly. Clay- low permeability- holds
water so it flows slowly. Limestone, sandstone are
permeable materials that often form aquifers.
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How does an aquifer recharge? When it rains, water
percolates through region of soil called recharge zone.
Recharge zone is determined by what is on surface of soil above Buildings, parking lots
reduce recharge zone Pollution can contaminate
recharge zone & contaminate aquifer.
Can take 10’s of 1,000’s of years to recharge
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How do wells impact groundwater sources? Well- hole dug/drilled to
reach groundwater Well water is filtered by soil
before it reaches aquifer-relatively clean. (usually filters are added on the pump that draws the water up)
Must reach way below the water table b/c water table changes seasonally.
If water is pumped out quickly it will create a cone of depression that may prevent other wells from reaching water.
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You should be able to… Describe the distribution of water on Earth. Where is
most of the freshwater located?
Explain why fresh water is considered a limited resource.
Explain why pollution in a watershed poses a potential threat to the river system that flows through it.
Describe how water travels through rocks and soil.