Ch 8 Geology Exam
Cone of depression
How far the well dips below the water table
Movement of groundwater is exceedingly
Slow from pore to pore
How are slumps and slides related?
Slumps are a type of slide in the special case where the rupture surface is curved.
What happens to rills
They merge to form gullies which eventually join to create streams
why does groundwater discharge to earths surface
earth's surface is irregular, and permeability decreases with depth within Earth
How can pieces of rock in contact with a stream bed move?
rolling, sliding, bouncing
Ultimate base level is
sea level
What is karst topography identified by
sinking streams, solution valleys and depression called sinkholes
What is runoff measured by
stream discharge
Lakes, resistant rocks, and main rivers often act as
temporary or local, base levels that control the erosional and depositional activities of a stream for a period of time
Where does meandering often become very pronounced
Near the mouth of a river where the channel is very near base level
Does subsequent rise in the water table restore porosity and permeability
No the table will not restore porosity and permeability to pre subsidence values
Percentage from oceans =
Ocean evaporation/ total evaporation
how does water get from the oceans onto land
Ocean water evaporates to form gaseous water and moves into the atmosphere, where it condenses into liquid water and falls out of the atmosphere to land as rain.
Cutback
On the outside of a meander where velocity increases and the stream erodes
Hydrographs
Plots of streamflow, or runoff, over time
Peak flow
Potential flood
Rills
Run off that initially flows in broad sheets form these tiny channels
If the sea level is not dropping, what is a source of water for the oceans in addition to precipitation
Runoff
Does total runoff occur over a longer or shorter time span after an area has been urbanized
Runoff occurs over a shorter time after urbanization
Base level
The lowest point to which a stream can erod
Transpiration
The release of water vapor by vegetation
Lag time
The span between when rainfall occurred and when peak stream discharge occurred
How is the precipitation that falls on the land calculated
The sum total of evaporation, transpiration, runoff and infiltration
What would likely happen to a fence on a hill over time if the fence were built perpendicular to the hill's slope?
The top of the fence would likely bend uphill as creeping rocks moved under the fence and pushed the fence bottom downslope.
stream discharge
The volume of water flowing past a given point per unit of time usually measured in cubic feet per second
What happens when compaction occurs
porosity and permeability are permanently reduced
original source for groundwater
precipitation
What is the water table?
the top of the saturated zone beneath Earth's surface
Worldwide, about how much of the precipitation that falls on the land becomes runoff
35%
Apprx, what percentage of the total water evaporated into the atmosphere comes from the ocean
84.2%
Infiltration
A portion of precipitation that falls on land that soaks into the ground
Widespread lateral erosion by the meandering river produces
A wide floodplain
Whats part of the bed load
Gravel and sand
Serious problem with ground subsidence
As demand for freshwater increases, surface subsidence caused by the withdrawal of groundwater aquifers present a serious problem in many areas
Why do urban areas ofter experience more flash flooding than do rural areas during intense rainfalls
Because of the building covering the surface there is a longer time for the water to be infiltrated so it builds up and causes excess of surface water aka flooding
Hydrolic cycle
Continuous movement of water from the oceans to the atmosphere and then from the atmosphere to the land and then from the land back to sea
How are debris avalanches and flows related?
Debris avalanches are large, rapid flows of rock.
What is the effect of urbanization on lag time
Decreases
What is the general relationship between ground subsidence and the level of water in the well
Directly coorelated
Groundwater moving beneath the surface below the water table flows is which direction?
Downhill perpendicular to the topographic contour lines
What cause meandering paths in down streams from headwaters
Downward erosion becomes less dominant. Instead the rivers energy is directed from side to side
Water table during a drought
Drops
What is the balance between infiltration and runoff influenced by
Factors such as the permeability of the surface material, slope of the land, intensity of the rainfall and type and amount of vegetation.
How is a fall different from creep?
Falls occur rapidly and in areas with high slope, whereas creep occurs slowly in areas with low slope.
Method of measuring the rate of groundwater movement
Involves introducing dye into a well. Time is measured until the coloring agent appears in another well at a known distance from the first
What happens to much of water that falls on land
It doesn't immediately return to the ocean via runoff. Instead it is temporarily stores in reservoirs such as lakes
What happens to most of the water that reaches the land surface
It will infiltrate or run off
What happens when water infiltrates to the depth of the clay lens above a water table
It will store on top of the clay and create an area of saturated zone on top of it
Movement between land surface water and groundwater
Land surface is relatively easy to visualize and the movement of groundwater is less obvious
What is said to resemble karst topography
Landscapes dominated by features that result from groundwater dissolving and removing the underlying soluble rock, usually limestone
In human regions
Mass movements and other slope erosion processes tend to produce V shape valleys
Suspended Load
The fine grained particles that travel in the water column above the stream bed
Downstream from the headwaters
The gradient of a river decreases while its discharge increases because of the additional water that is added by tributaries
How does the use of water by humans affect the water table?
Use of water by humans increases discharge, resulting in lowered water tables.
In arid areas where rivers are eroding what are bedrock valleys
Usually narrow with nearly vertical walls
Where is the head located
Usually well above base level as the source of the rivers or streams
On the inside of a meander
Velocity slows and deposition of a point bar often occurs
Erosion in hydrologic cycle
Wears down the land and shapes earths surface
Water Table
What separates saturated and unsaturated zone
How are rapids and waterfalls formed
When headwater streams run into rocks that are especially resistant to erosion
When does runoff occur on the surface
When the ground becomes saturated, that is when it contains all the water it can hold
Runoff
When the rate of rainfalls exceeds the ability of the surface to absorb it (infiltration)
how much of earths surface water exists in the oceans
almost all of earths surface water exists in the oceans
Which of the following would produce a LOWER water table?
an increase in the amount of discharge to surface water a decrease in the amount of recharge to groundwater
where is most of earths freshwater found
as ice at earths surface
Why is running water the most important that shape earths surface
because rivers and streams are responsible for producing a vast array of erosional and depositional landforms in both humid and arid regions
What are the 3 types of loads carried by streams
bed load, suspended load, dissolved load
Beneath the surface, removal of soluble rock may result in
caves and caverns
Bouncing is to sand as suspension is to
clay
Which of the following are classifications describing how rock and other material move downslope?
fall, slide, slump, creep, flow
Which type of mass movement event requires the addition of water?
flow
When pumping removed groundwater from an aquifer in the Santa Clara Valley
ground subsidence can occur as grains pack more closely together.
Common misconception about groundwater
groundwater occurs in underground rivers that resemble surface streams
Where do running water features begin
headwaters of a river while others are found near the mouth
what does the hydrologic cycle describle
how liquid and gaseous water moves between the ocean, atmosphere and land
Where does groundwater exist
in the pore spaces and fractures in rock and sediment
Does urbanization increase or decrease the peak streamflow
increASE
Sliding is to gravel as dissolution is to
ions
What do factors such as climate, steepness of slope, surrounding material, vegetation and degree of urbanization produce
local variation in the globally uniform exchange of water balance
where do meanders originally occur
midway through their course
what is mass movement
movement of material under the influence of gravity alone
Globally, from which source does more water evaporate into the atmosphere, ocean or land?
ocean
what would happen to atmospheric water if earth were mostly covered with land
the atmosphere would contain less water
What would happen to the oceans if surface runoff and groundwater flow did NOT occur?
the oceans would become smaller
which ocean is earths largest
the pacific ocean
what is the cone of depression
the shape that the water table takes on near a pumping well
Initial power source for the water cycle
the sun
how does the water table change around a pumping water well
the water table elevation decreases
How would the water table be affected if Earth were made up of uniform, permeable material?
the water table would not exist
when will a cone of depression stop enlarging
when the amount of water flowing toward the well equals the amount of water being pumped out of the well
when might a well go dry
when the cone of depression of a second well intersects the deepest part of the well
Lateral erosion by a meandering river
widens the valley floor and a floodplain begins to form