Chapter 14: Groundwater Geology 111

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Concept 14.8 1. Describe the problem associated with pumping groundwater for irrigation in the southern High Plains

In some parts of the region, where intense irrigation has been practiced for an extended period, depletion of groundwater has been severe.

sinkholes

karst areas have irregular terrain punctuated with many depressions called sinkholes or sinks. In the limestone area of Florida, Kentucky, and southern Indiana, there are tens of thousands of these depressions varying in depth 3 - 6 feet to a maximum of more than 165 feet

Different Scales of Movement The diagram includes substyems at three different subsystems at three different scales. Variations in surface topography and subsurface geology can produce a complex situation. The horizontal scale of the figure could range from tens to hundreds of

kilometers

Groundwater is a major source of water for __ and ___.

lakes and wetlands

Groundwater comes in contact with ____, the carbonic acid reacts with the calcite (calcium carbonate) in the rocks to form __ __, a soluble material that is then carried away in solution.

limestone calcium bicarbonate

Groundwater is a major ___ of liquid freshwater

reservoir

Considering the hydrosphere or all of Earth's water, what percent occurs underground?

six-tenths of 1 % stored in rocks and sediments beneath Earth's surface is a vast quantity

The depth of the water table is highly variable and can range from ___, when it is at the surface, to hundreds of meters in some places. The water table configuration can vary seasonally and year to year

zero

Karst topography occurs more rapidly in tropical climate due to the abundant rainfall and the greater availability of carbon dioxide from the decay of lush tropical vegetation. The extra carbon dioxide in the soil means there is more carbonic acid for dissolving limestone.

1. Puerto Rico, 2. western Cuba 3. northern Vietnam

Concept 14.7 checks 1. Describe some circumstances that lead to a formation of a spring.

1. Whenever the water table intersects Earth's surface, a natural outflow of groundwater results, and we call this a spring. Springs form when an aquitard blocks the downward movement of groundwater and forces it to move laterally. Where the permeable bed crops out, a spring results. Another example is illustrated in figure 14.15 which shows a perched water table intersecting a slope.

What share of Earth's liquid freshwater is groundwater?

94%

2. Explain why ground may subside after groundwater is pumped to the surface.

Ground may also sink when water is pumped from wells faster than natural recharge processes can replace it. This effect is particularly pronounced in areas underlain by thick layers of unconsolidated sediments. As the water is withdrawn, the water pressure drops, and the weight of the overburden is transferred to the sediment. The greater pressure packs the sediment grains tightly together, and the ground subsides.

Karst Topography

In the U.S., karst landscapes occur in many areas that are underlain by limestone, including portions of Kentucky, Tennessee, Alabama, southern Indiana, and central and northern Florida.

Concept 14.4 2. Relate groundwater movement to hydraulic gradient and hydraulic conductivity

The velocity of groundwater flow is proportional to the slope of the water table. The steeper the slope, the faster the water moves (because the steeper the slope, the greater the pressure difference between two point). The water-table slope is known as the hydraulic gradient. Groundwater flows more rapidly through sediments having greater permeability than through materials having lower permeability. this factor is known as hydraulic conductivity and is a coefficient that takes into account the permeability of the aquifer and the viscosity of the fluid.

confined aquifer

aquitards, both above and below the aquifer, must be present to prevent the water from escaping

geysers

are intermittent hot springs or fountains in which columns of water are ejected with great force at various intervals often rising 100 to 200 feet After the jet of water ceases, a column of steam rushes out, usually with a thunderous roar. ex: Old Faithful in Yellowstone national Park ex: New Zealand and Iceland Icelandic word geysa means "to gush."

Some wells rises, sometimes overflowing at the surface. Such wells are abundant in Artois region of northern France, and we call these self-rising wells ___.

artesian

As soon as the chamber is filled with air, the stage is set for the decoration phase of cavern building to _____.

begin

Cavern Development

created below the water table, in the zone of saturation Here acidic groundwater follows lines of weakness in the rock, such as joints and bedding planes.

Whenever water is withdrawn from a well, the water table around the well is lowered. This effect, termed _____, decreases with increasing distance from the well.

drawdown

Section 14.4 How Groundwater Moves Groundwater exists in the pore spaces and ____ in rock and sediment.

fractures

The deeper you go into the zone of saturation, the _____ the water pressure.

greater

When it rains, some of the water runs off, some returns to atmosphere by evaporation and transpiration, and the remainder soaks into the ___. this last path is the primary source of all subsurface water.

ground

The water table - slope is known as the _____ ____ and can be expressed as followed.

hydraulic gradient = h1 - h2/d h1 is the elevation of one point on the water table h2 is the elevation of a second point on the water table d is the distance between two points

Interactions Between Groundwater systems and streams is a basic link in the _____ cycle.

hydrologic

Groundwater movement is usually slow, polluted water can go undetected for a long time. In fact, contamination is sometimes discovered only after drinking water has been affected and people become

ill.

spring

image of a spring

permeability in rocks

is the ability to transmit a fluid the pores must be connected to allow water flow and they must be large enough to allow flow.

The energy that makes groundwater move is provided by the force of gravity. In response to gravity, water moves from areas where the water table is high to zones where the water table is __

lower.

Karst Topography

many areas of the world have landscapes that, to a large extent, have been shaped by the dissolving power of groundwater. named for the Krs Plateau in Slovenia, located along the adriatic Sea, where such topography is strikingly developed.

hazardous

means that they are either flammable, corrosive, explosic, or toxic

In some regions, groundwater has been and continues to be treated as a ____ resource. Where this occurs, the water available to recharge the aquifer falls significantly short of the amount being withdrawn.

nonrewable resource

The most effective solution to groundwater contamination is ____.

prevention.

Although the formation of caverns takes place in zone of ____, the deposition of dripstone is not possible until the carverns are above the water table in the unsaturated zone.

saturation

One common source of groundwater pollution is sewage. Its sources include an ever-increasing number of ___ ___, as well as inadequate or broken sewer systems and farm wastes.

septic tanks

When the water contains dissolved silica, a material called ___ sinter or ____ is deposited around the spring.

siliceous sinter or geyserite

holding ponds

similar problems may result from leakage of shallow excavations called __ __ into which a variety of liquid wastes are disposed.

This fact is key to understanding how caverns and ___ form.

sinkholes

speleothems

various dripstone features found in caverns are collectively called __. No two are exactly alike.

Concept Check 14.2 Contrast a gaining stream and a losing stream.

1. Streams may gain water from the inflow of groundwater through the stream bed. Such streams are called gaining streams. 2. Streams may lose water to the groundwater system by outflow through the streambed.

Measuring Groundwater Movement The velocity of groundwater flow is proportional to the ___. The steeper the slope, the faster the water moves (because the steeper the slope, the greater the pressure difference between two points.)

slope of the water table

Concept 14.1 What share of U.S. freshwater is provided by groundwater? What is most groundwater used for?

23 % for irrigation

hot springs

95% are found in the U.S. in the West sources for the heat are magma bodies and hot igneous rocks ex: Hot springs and geysers of the Yellowstone region

concept 14.6 2. Why do some artesian wells not flow at Earth's surface?

Because the pressure surface is below ground level.

Saltwater Contamination

If groundwater withdrawal continues to exceed recharge, there will come a time when the elevation of the saltwater will be sufficiently high to be drawn into wells, thus contaminating the freshwater supply. Deep wells and wells near the shore are the first to be affected.

Concept 14.5 Checks 1. Relate drawdown to cone of depression.

Whenever water is withdrawn from a well, the water table round the well is lowered. This effect termed drawdown, decreases with increasing distance from the well. The result if a depression in the water table, roughly conical in shape, known as a cone of depression.

Limestone is insoluble in pure water but is quite easily dissolved by water containing quantities of ___ ___ and most groundwater contains this acid. It forms because rainwater dissolves carbon dioxide from the air and from decaying plants.

carbonic acid

Concept 14.3 Distinguish between porosity and permeability.

the quantity of water that can be stored in a material depends on the material's porosity (the volume of open spaces). The permeability (the ability to transmit a fluid through interconnected pore spaces) of a material is a very important factor controlling the movement of groundwater.

Describe two ways in which sink holes form?

1. Some develop gradually over many years, without any physical disturbance to the rock. 2. Sinkholes can also form abruptly and without warning when the roof of a cavern collapses under its own weight. The depressions created in this manner are steep-sided and steep.

How to sinkholes form?

1. Some develop gradually over many years, without any physical disturbance to the rock. 2. Sinkholes can also form abruptly and without warning when the roof of a cavern collapses under its own weight. The depressions created in this manner are steep-sided and steep.

Saltwater Contamination how is the problem fixed?

1. a network of recharge wells may be used. These wells allow wastewater to be pumped back into the groundwater system. 2. building large recharge basins. These basins collect surface drainage and allow it to seep into the ground. ex: This problem was seen in New York Long Island and both of these methods have been successful.

Concept 14.1 List two geologic roles that groundwater plays.

1. erosional agent 2. is a form of storage that sustains streams during periods when rain does not fall

Section 14.5 Wells starts here:

1. principle source of drinking water for 50% of U.S. population 2. provides 96% of the water used for rural domestic supplies

Section 14.2 Concept 1. When rain falls on land, what factors influence the amount of water that soaks in?

1. steepness of slope 2. nature of surface material 3. intensity of rainfall 4. type and amount of vegetation

Groundwater is important as an erosional agent

1. the dissolving action of groundwater slowly removes soluble rock such as limestone, allowing surface depressions known as sinkholes as well as creating subterranean caverns. 2. form of storage that sustains streams during periods when rain does not fall.

Several factors contribute to the irregular surface of the water table.

1. the fact that groundwater moves very slowly and at varying rates under different conditions 2. Water tends to pile up beneath high areas between stream valleys. 3. variations in rainfall and permeability from place to place

Concept 14.1 What percentage of Earth's total freshwater supply is groundwater?

14.6%

Concept Checks 14.6 1. Sketch a simple cross section of an artesian system with a flowing well. Label aquitards, aquifers, and the pressure surface.

Artesian wells tap into inclined bounded above and below by aquitards. For a system to qualify as artesian, the water in the well must be under sufficient pressure that it can rise above the top of the confined aquifer. Artesian wells may be flowing or nonflowing, depending on whether the pressure surface is above or below the groundwater.

The deposits of mammoth Hot Springs in Yellowstone Nationals Park are more spectacular than most others.

As the hot water flows upward through a series of channels and then out at the surface, the reduced pressure allows carbon dioxide to separate and escape from the water. The loss of carbon dioxide causes the water to become supersaturated with calcium carbonate, which then precipitates.

Concept 14.7 Describe what occurs to cause a geyser to erupt.

Geysers are intermittent hot springs that erupt hot water periodically. They are fed by underground chambers that fill with warm water that warms past the boiling point. Once most of the water in the chamber has been sufficiently heated, it will flash to water vapor and rapidly expand, expelling some liquid water as it forces its way to the surface in an eruption.

4. Describe a significant problem that may arise when groundwater is heavily pumped at a coastal site.

If groundwater withdrawal continues to exceed recharge, there will come a time when the elevation of the saltwater will be sufficiently high to be drawn into wells, thus contaminating the freshwater supply. Deep wells and wells near the shore are usually the first to be affected.

concept 14.5 In Figure 14.15, two wells are at the same level. why was one successful and the other not?

It may be because there is a perched water table beneath one of them. A perched water table forms where an aquitard is situated above the main water table. Massive igneous and metamorphic rocks provide a second example. these crystalline rocks are usually not very permeable, except where they are cut by many intersecting joints and fractures.

Concept 14.2 A kitchen table is flat. Is this usually the case for a water table? why?

Its shape is usually a subdued replica of the surface topography, reaching its highest elevations beneath hills and descending toward valleys 1. Groundwater moves very slowly and at varying rates under different conditions. (water tends to pile up beneath high areas between stream valleys) 2. In times of extended drought, the water table may drop enough to dry up shallow wells 3. Other causes for the uneven water table are variations in rainfall and permeability from place to place.

Concept 14.3 Distinguish between aquitards and aquifers.

Materials with very small pore spaces (such as clay) hinder or prevent groundwater and are called aquitards. Aquifers consists of materials with larger pore spaces (such as sand) that are permeable and transmit groundwater freely.

Concept Check 14.9 1. How does groundwater create caverns?

Most caverns are created at or just below the water table in the zone of saturation. Here acidic groundwater follows lines of weakness in the rock, such as joints and bedding planes. As time passes, the dissolving process slowly creates cavities and gradually enlarges them into caverns. Material that is dissolved by the groundwater is discharged into streams and carried to the ocean.

Some regions of karst development exhibit landscapes that look different from the sinkhole - studded terrain depicted in figure 14.33.

One example is an extensive region in southern China that is described as exhibiting tower karst.

To determine discharge (Q) the actual volume of water that flows through an aquifer in a specified time the following equation is used

Q = KA (h1 - h2)/d where h1 - h2/d is the hydraulic conductivity, and A is the cross-sectional area of the aquifer. This expression is called Darcy's Law in honor of the pioneering French scientist- engineer.

figure 14.10 shows water percolating into a stream from all possible directions:

Some paths clearly turn upward, apparently against the force of gravity, and enter through the bottom of the channel.

Concept 14.4 3. Contrast ground movement in a near surface local system with that in a deep regional system.

The blue arrows represent water movement in several local groundwater systems that occur in the upper water table aquifer. They are separated by groundwater divides at the center of the hills and discharge into the nearest surface water body. The black arrows show groundwater movement in a deep regional system that lies beneath the more shallow ones and is connected to them.

Concept 14.4 1. What factors cause water to follow the paths shown in figure 14.10

The looping flow lines result from the downward pull of gravity and the tendency of groundwater to move toward areas of reduced pressures.

Concept 14.7 What is the source of heat for most hot springs and geysers? How is this reflected in the distribution of these features?

The majority (95%) of the hot springs and geysers in the U.S. are found in the west. The sources of heat for most hot springs are magma bodies and hot igneous rocks, and it is in the West that igneous activity has occurred more recently. The hot springs of the Yellowstone region are well-known examples.

porosity

The quantity of groundwater that can be stored depends on the __ of the material, which is the percentage of the total volume of rock or sediment that consists of pore spaces.

Concept 14.7 What warms the waters that flow at Hot Springs National Park, Arkansas, and at Warm Springs, Georgia?

The water in a hot spring is 10 to 15 F warmer than the mean annual air temperature for the locality where it occurs. In the U.S., there are more than 1000 springs. Temperatures in deep mines and oil wells usually rise with increasing depth, an average of 45F per kilometer, a figure known as the geothermal gradient. When groundwater circulates at great depths, it becomes heated. If the hot water rises rapidly to the surface, it may emerge as a hot spring. The springs in eastern U.S. is heated in this manner. ex: Warm Springs, Georgia and Hot Springs National Park, Arkansas

City water systems can be considered examples of artificial artesian systems.

The water tower, into which water is pumped, would represent the area of recharge, the pipes the confined aquifer, and the faucets in homes the flowing artesian wells.

The ground may also sink when water is pumped from wells faster than natural recharge processes can replace it.

This effect is pronounced in areas underlain by thick layers of unconsilidated sediments. As the water is withdrawn, the water pressure drops, and the weight of the overburden is transferred to the sediment. The greater pressure packs the sediment grains tightly together, and the ground subsides. ex: outside the United States in Mexico City, a portion of which is built on a former lake bed.

Concept 14.9 What causes cavern formation to stop at one level (depth) but continue or begin at a lower level?

This situation reflects the close relationship between the formation of major subterrarean passages and the river valleys into which they drain. As streams cut their valleys deeper, the water table drops as the elevation of the river drops. Consequently, during periods when surface streams are rapidly downcutting, surrounding groundwater levels drop rapily, and cave passages are abandoned by the water while passages are still relatively small in cross-sectional area.

Hot springs

Water is 10 to 15 degrees F warmer than the mean annual air temperature for the locality where it occurs ex: Warm Springs, Georgia (Presidential retreat for Franklin Roosevelt) temp = 90 degrees Fahrenheit ex: Hot Springs National Park, Arkansas temp = 140 F ex: hot springs and geysers of the Yellowstone National Park

Concept 14.2 Define groundwater and relate it to the water table.

Water that is not held as soil moisture percolates downward until it reaches a zone where all the open spaces in sediment and rock are completely filled with water. This zone is the zone of saturation or phreatic zone. Water in the zone of saturation is called groundwater.

3. Which aquifer would be most effective in purifying polluted groundwater: coarse gravel, sand, or cavernous limestone?

When the aquifer is composed of sand or permeable sandstone, it can sometimes be purified after traveling only a few dozen meters through it. The openings between sand grains are large enough to permit water movement, yet the movement of water is slow enough to allow ample time for its purification.

concept 14.5 2. How does a heavily pumping well affect the water table?

When wells are heavily pumped for irrigation or for industrial purposes, the withdrawal of water can be great enough to create a very wide and steep cone of depression. This may substantially lower the water table in an area and cause nearby shallow wells to become dry.

Groundwater flow system

a three-dimensional body of Earth material saturated with moving groundwater

discharge

along a stream where groundwater is flowing back to the surface occurs at springs, lakes,or wetlands, and in coastal areas, as groundwater seeps into bays or the ocean transpiration by plants whose roots extend to near the water table represents another form of groundwater discharge wells where groundwater, is being pumped to the surface are artificial discharge areas

unsaturated zone

area above the water table that includes the capillary fringe and the zone of soil moisture also called the vadose zone pore spaces in this zone contain both air and water. Although considerable amount of water can be present in the unsaturated zone, this water cannot be pumped by wells because it clings too tightly to rock and soil particles.

Groundwater: A basic Resource Water is basic to life. It has been called the bloodstream of both the ___ and ____.

biosphere and society.

Extending upward from the water table is the ___ ___. Here groundwater is held by surface tension in tiny passages between grains of soil or sediment.

capillary fringe

The most spectacular results of groundwater's erosional handiwork are limestone ___.

caverns U.S. 17,000 caves have been discovered and more are being found ever year. Mammoth Cave, Kentucky is the most extensive in the world with 335 miles of interconnected passages. Carlsbad Caverns in southeastern New Mexico has the Big Room and has an area equivalent to 14 football fields and enough height to accommodate the U.S. Capitol building.

Given enough time, a downward - growing stalactite and an upward - growing stalagmite may join to form a ___

column

The result is a depression in the water table, roughly conical in shape, known as the ___ ___ ___. Because of the cone of depression increases the hydraulic gradient near the well, groundwater will flow more rapidly toward the opening.

cone of depression

How dripstone forms. The stone formations that give some caverns a wonderland appearance are not erosional features, like the cavern itself, but

depositional features created by the seemingly endless dripping of water over great spans of time.

Because soluble rocks, especially limestone, underlie millions of square kilometers of Earth's surface, it is here that the groundwater carries on its important role as an ___ ____.

erosional agent.

It can take place in one of three ways. 1. Streams may gain water from the inflow of groundwater through the streambed. Such streams are called ___ ___. for this to occur, the elevation of the water table must be higher than the level of the surface of the stream. 2. Streams may lose water to the groundwater system by outflow through the streambed. The term _____ ____ is applied. When this happens the elevation of the water table must be lower than the surface of the stream. The third possibility is a combination of the first two: A stream gains in some sections and loses in others.

gaining streams losing streams

Water in the zone of saturation is called ____.

groundwater

artesian springs

groundwater may reach the surface by rising along a natural fracture such as a fault rather than through an artificially produced hole. In deserts, artesian springs are sometimes responsible for creating oases Act as conduits, often transmitting water great distances from remote areas of recharge to points of discharge. ex: Artesian system in SouthDakota In the western part of the state, the edges of a series of sedimentary layers have been bent up to the surface along the flanks of the Black Hills.

artesian system

image to go with number 74

aquitards

impermeable layers that hinder or prevent water movement clay is an example

artesian

is applied to any situation in which ground water under pressure rises above the level of the aquifer 1. water is confined to an aquifer that is inclined so that one end can receive water 2. aquitards, both above and below the aquifer, must be present to prevent the water from escaping.

The Water Table

is the upper limit of the zone of saturation significant feature of the groundwater system is important in predicting the productivity of wells explaining the changes in the flow of springs and streams, and accounting for fluctuations in the levels of lakes

Tower is appropriate because the landscape consists of a maze of

isolated steepsided hills that rise abruptly from the ground Each is riddled with interconnected caves and passageways. This type of karst topography forms in wet tropical and subtropical regions having thick beds of highly jointed limestone. Here groundwater has dissolved large volumes of limestone, leaving only these residual towers.

Stalactite or soda stra

most familiar speleothem these icicle-like pendants hang from the ceiling of the cavern and form where water seeps through cracks above. When water reaches the air in the cave, some of the dissolved carbon dioxide escapes from the drop and calcite precipitates.

In addition to containing dissolved silica and calcium carbonate, some hot springs contain sulfur, which gives water a poor taste and unpleasant ___.

odor. ex: Rotten Egg Spring, Nevada

Although some water takes the most direct path down the slope of the water table, much of the water follows long, curving ___.

paths

When two nearby wells are drilled to the same level and one is successful, it may be because there is a perched water table beneath them. A ___ ___ ___ forms where an aquitard is situated above the main water table.

perched water table ex: massive igneous and metamorphic rocks provide a second example

Groundwater flows more rapidly through sediments having greater ___ than through materials having lower permeability. This factor is known as hydraulic conductivity and is a coefficent that takes into account the permeability of the aquifer and the viscosity of the fluid.

permeability

aquifers

permeable rock strata or sediment that transmit groundwater freely ex: sands and gravels

As water is withdrawn from a well, the connected pore spaces and fractures act as a ___ that allows water to gradually move from one part of the hydrologic system to where it is being withdrawn.

piepline

Water soaks into the ground because the bedrock, sediment, and soil contain countless voids or openings. These openings are similar to those of a sponge and are often called __ ___.

pore spaces

Geyser Deposits When groundwater from hot springs and geysers flows out at the surface, material in solution is often ____, producing an accumulation of chemical sedimentary rock.

precipitated

nonflowing artesian well

pressure surface is below ground level

Many people believe that groundwater is an endlessly ____ resource because it is continually replenished by rainfall and melting snow.

renewable

Groundwater represents the largest ____ of freshwater that is readily available to humans. Its value in terms of economics and human well-being is incalculable.

reservoir

Groundwater dissolves __.

rock

zone of soil moisture

some of the water that soaks does not travel far because it is held by molecular attraction as a surface film on soil particles It is criss-crossed by roots, voids left by decayed roots, and animal and worm burrows that enhance the infiltration of rainwater into the soil.

stalagmites

speleothems that form on the floor of a cavern and reach upward toward the ceiling. The water supplying the calcite for stalagmite growth falls from the ceiling and splatters over the surface. As a result, stalagmites do have a central tube and are usually more massive in appearance and rounded on their upper ends than stalactites.

Springs are not confined to places where a perched water table creates a flow at the surface. Many geologic situations lead to the formations of springs, because subsurface conditions vary greatly from place to place. Even in areas underlain by impermeable crystalline rocks, permeable zones may exist in the form of fractures or solution channels. If these openings fill with water and intersect the ground surface along a slope, a ___ results.

spring

Whenever the water table intersects Earth's surface, a natural outflow of groundwater results and we call this a ____. Springs form when an aquitard blocks the downward movement of groundwater and forces it to move laterally. Where the permeable bed crops out, a spring results.

spring ex: thousand springs These well-known springs are along the Snake River in Hagerman Valley, Idaho

Concept 14.9 How do stalactites and stalagmites form?

stalactites: these icicle-like pendants hang from the ceiling of the cavern and form where water seeps through cracks above. When water reaches the air in the cave, some of the dissolved carbon dioxide escapes from the drop and calcite precipitates. stalagmites The water supplying the calcite for stalagmite growth falls from the ceiling and splatters over the surface. As a result, stalagmites do have a central tube and are usually more massive in appearance and rounded on their upper ends than stalactites.

We use 349 billion gallons of freshwater 77% comes from ___ ____. 23 % comes from ___.

surface waters, like lakes and rivers groundwater in pore spaces and fractures

Geysers occur where extensive underground chambers exist within hot igneous rocks. As relatively cool groundwater enters the chambers, it is heated by the ____ rock. A portion of the water deep within the chamber quickly turns to steam, and the geyser erupts. following eruption, cool groundwater again seeps into the chamber, and the cycle begins anew.

surrounding

recharge

the water moving along flow paths from areas of __, where groundwater is replenished

The calcium carbonate that is left behind produces the limestone we call____. These cave deposits, are commonly called dripstone and obvious reference to their mode of origin.

travertine

When the water contains dissolved calcium carbonate, a form of limestone called _____ or ____ ___ is deposited.

travertine, or calcareous tufa

The source of spring is ____ from the zone of saturation and the ultimate source of this water is precipitation.

water

The upper limit of this zone is known as the ___ ___

water table

zone of saturation

water that is not held as soil moisture percolates downward until it reaches a zone where all the open spaces in sediment and rocks are completely filled with water. also called phreatic zone

The most common method for removing groundwater is to use a ___, a hole bored into the zone of saturation. Wells serve as small reservoirs into which groundwater migrates and from which it can be pumped to the surface.

well

Below the water table, the water pressure is great enough to allow water to enter ___, thus permitting groundwater to be withdrawn for use.

wells

flowing artesian well

when the pressure surface is above the ground and a well is drilled into the aquifer, a ___ ___ ___ is created.


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