Chapter 17: Water Resources

Ace your homework & exams now with Quizwiz!

Each of the vertical arrows added onto this diagram represents a well. Which is most likely to be unsuccessful in producing water?

1

The layer that would act as an aquitard is the ______.

3. Mud and clay

Which layer in this drill log would likely have a confined aquifer?

4. Lower gravel

How much water recharged the Ogallala aquifer in 2000? How much water was removed during 2000? How much water is expected to recharge in 2050? How much water is expected to be pumped in 2050?

500; 2,000; 500; 1,800 to 1,000 m3/year

About ______ of Earth's water is found in oceans.

96.5%

Which of the following are specifically human-made or human-induced substances that can contaminate groundwater?

Agricultural wastes Human wastes Insecticides

What natural contaminant has contaminated million of wells in Bangladesh?

Arsenic

If an acre of land was irrigated with 1 acre-foot of water, the water would cover the acre inches deep before it soaked in.

Blank 1: 12 or twelve

What name is used for any type of rock that retards the flow of water in an aquifer?

Blank 1: Aquitard

The pore spaces in the unsaturated zone of the subsurface are filled with . The pore spaces in the saturated zone are filled with .

Blank 1: air Blank 2: water or groundwater

A large body of permeable, saturated material through which groundwater can flow well enough to yield sufficient volumes of water to wells and springs is a(n) .

Blank 1: aquifer

The term means that groundwater is confined and rises in a well because it is under pressure.

Blank 1: artesian

Groundwater is free water that exists beneath Earth's surface as a liquid rather than being chemically in minerals.

Blank 1: bonded, combined, joined, or united

Earth's water originated with the origin of the planet and from that struck the surface. (Use just one word per blank.)

Blank 1: comets

If groundwater is removed from an aquifer by overpumping, a cone of will form.

Blank 1: depression

The groundwater in this image is encountering a less permeable rock as it flows to the left, but is making its way to the ground surface along the .

Blank 1: fault

When groundwater is overdeveloped, subsidence of the land may occur. In areas with unconsolidated sediments, compaction occurs, whereas in areas of solid bedrock, in the rock develop in order to accommodate the change in surface elevation.

Blank 1: fissures, fractures, cracks, or joints

Most groundwater is found in three settings: pore spaces, , and subterranean caves.

Blank 1: fractures

Groundwater found in crystalline rock such as granite usually moves through instead of pore spaces.

Blank 1: fractures, fissures, cracks, or joints

The part of a stream that receives water from the inflow of groundwater is called a(n) stream. The part of a stream that loses to outflow is called a losing stream.

Blank 1: gaining Blank 2: water

A part of a stream that receives water from the inflow of groundwater is called a(n) stream.

Blank 1: gaining or influent

Hydrogeologists collect information such as depth, amount, setting, direction of flow, and quality to understand the behavior of .

Blank 1: groundwater

Lakes and rivers are often found in topographic lows where is expressed as surface water.

Blank 1: groundwater

Accidental spills on the surface, leaking underground storage tanks, and deep disposal wells are the sources of contaminants that pollute .

Blank 1: groundwater or aquifers

Farms, ranches, and commercial orchards are contributors to contamination of by using various chemicals such as pesticides, fungicides, and fertilizers that are not completely used when applied and then infiltrate the ground surface.

Blank 1: groundwater or water

Subsidence is the lowering of the elevation of the ground surface due to excessive pumping of .

Blank 1: groundwater, oil, petroleum, or water

Materials with high porosity usually have permeability.

Blank 1: high or higher

Rocks and sediments with clasts that are well-sorted and well-rounded have porosity. Rocks and sediments that are angular and poorly sorted have porosity.

Blank 1: higher or high Blank 2: lower or low

Saltwater occurs if groundwater wells are overpumped along coastlines.

Blank 1: incursion or intrusion

The main use of the water from the Ogallala aquifer is for of rangeland and agricultural land.

Blank 1: irrigation

Most of the liquid freshwater on the surface of Earth is located in .

Blank 1: lakes

Groundwater exists beneath Earth's surface as a(n) rather than being chemically bonded in minerals.

Blank 1: liquid or fluid

The figure shown here is associated with well drilling and represents data collected from a drill .

Blank 1: log or core

Materials with low porosity usually have permeability.

Blank 1: low or lower

Reservoirs used to produce electricity, canals used for transportation, and lakes used for recreation are examples of water with uses.

Blank 1: multiple, several, many, or various

The majority of Earth's water is found in the .

Blank 1: oceans or seas

A perched lake may remain permanent if the inflow of water is at least equal to the of water.

Blank 1: outflow, loss, depletion, or discharge

The capacity of a rock to transmit a fluid is .

Blank 1: permeability

The rate of groundwater flow is strongly controlled by the of the rock type.

Blank 1: permeability

The term given to the shape of contamination as it follows the flow of groundwater is .

Blank 1: plume

Groundwater exists in the spaces between sediment grains.

Blank 1: pore

The percentage of rock or sediment that consists of voids or openings and is a measure of a rock's ability to hold water is its .

Blank 1: porosity

Groundwater originates from snowmelt and , which seeps into the surface of Earth.

Blank 1: precipitation or rain

Water that can flow across the surface as runoff comes from snowmelt and .

Blank 1: rainfall, precipitation, or rain

The term that describes the replenishment of groundwater either naturally or by human processes is groundwater .

Blank 1: recharge

More water is evaporated from the ocean than enters through precipitation, yet worldwide sea level is not decreasing. The ocean balanced input and output with from land.

Blank 1: runoff

The volume of water in the Ogallala aquifer can be estimate from its thickness.

Blank 1: saturated

A place where water flows naturally out from rock onto the land surface is a(n) .

Blank 1: spring

The three important controls of how quickly water flows through rocks are porosity of the materials, permeability of the materials, and the of the water table.

Blank 1: steepness, gradient, or slope

The dropping of the ground surface elevation due to the effects of overpumping is called .

Blank 1: subsidence

Contamination typically flows with the groundwater down the slope of the water .

Blank 1: table

The top of the saturated zone, as marked by the dashed line in the illustration, is called the water .

Blank 1: table

The type of aquifer that has the water-bearing unit open to Earth's surface and atmosphere is a(n) aquifer (A), whereas a(n) aquifer(B) is separated from Earth's surface by low permeability rocks.

Blank 1: unconfined Blank 2: confined

Liters, gallons, and acre-feet are three ways in which we measure the of water.

Blank 1: volume

Power plants use to create steam to drive turbines that generate , but they also use the same resource for cooling.

Blank 1: water Blank 2: electricity

Wetlands can form near lakes at the same level as the table. In other cases, wetlands can be perched at higher elevations where clays or other low- materials trap precipitation and runoff and slow infiltration.

Blank 1: water Blank 2: permeability

Most lakes mark where the intersects and rises above the land surface.

Blank 1: water or groundwater Blank 2: table

The first step in constructing a contour map of a(n) table is to collect and plot the elevations of all of the available wells in an area.

Blank 1: water, H2O, H20

Which of the materials listed has a low permeability and often a high porosity, actually swelling in volume as it absorbs excess water?

Clay

Which of the following contribute water to a stream?

Direct precipitation Groundwater Snowmelt

Which of the following are common sources of groundwater contamination?

Factories Service stations Landfills

True or false: Groundwater reservoirs are stationary with no movement or flow.

False

How are springs affected by faulting?

Faults provide a permeable pathway for groundwater movement to the surface.

Select the two common ways in which groundwater originates and accumulates.

Groundwater originates from precipitation seeping into the surface where it accumulates. Groundwater originates from snowmelt seeping into the surface where it accumulates.

If a well has a cone of depression associated with it because of overpumping of the groundwater, what is a possible consequence?

Groundwater, which may contain pollutants, will flow toward the cone of depression and cause a polluted well.

Which of the following are considered common groundwater contaminants?

Hazardous microbes Hazardous chemicals

Which of the following choices best describes what happens to the flow of groundwater if a cone of depression is formed?

Instead of flowing in one direction, groundwater flows toward the cone of depression from all directions.

What is the main use of the water pumped from the Ogallala Aquifer?

Irrigation

How does groundwater move?

It flows horizontally. It moves into springs and lakes. It infiltrates downward.

What will happen to sewage contamination that flows through sandstone as compared to flowing through cavernous limestone?

It will be naturally filtered in the sandstone.

Choose all of the possible pathways, direct or indirect, for contaminants to get into groundwater.

Leaking storage ponds Fumes and particles from smokestacks Accidental spills onto the ground Accidental spills into waterways

Select all the geologic settings where springs could occur.

Limestone aquifers Unconformities Faults

Which of the following geologic materials usually has the highest permeability?

Loosely cemented gravel and sand

Which of the following would be information that a geophysical survey could provide to a geologist?

Measurements in the variation of gravity Magnetism measurements Electrical conductivity measurements

Which of the following statements correctly describes the production of water on Earth?

Most of Earth's water originated during the planet's formation and from comets.

From the choices below, select all the places or rock types that would be good aquifers.

Most sandstone Poorly cemented sand and gravel Highly fractured rocks of nearly any type Cavernous limestone

Which section of the Ogallala aquifer has the greatest saturated thickness and thus the most water?

Northern

The most important aquifer in the United States that sits under the High Plains from South Dakota to Texas is called the ______.

Ogallala aquifer

______ sits above the main water table where a lens of impermeable rock blocks and collects water infiltrating into the ground.

Perched water

What property of a rock, as modeled in this image, is the primary control on the rate of ground water flow?

Permeability

Choose the three properties that control the rate of groundwater flow through rocks.

Permeability of the rock materials Steepness of the water table Porosity of the rock materials

Using the diagram, if you were a geologist looking for water, which area would you drill an exploratory well into?

Permeable sands

What word or phrase do geologists use to describe where groundwater exists between sediment grains, as shown in this image?

Pore spaces

What settings are groundwater typically found in?

Pore spaces Fractures Caves

Which of these is the last step taken in a groundwater investigation?

Remediation of contamination

Which of the following materials would serve as an aquitard?

Shale

Which of these geologic materials has the lowest permeability?

Shale

Using the figure of a contour map of groundwater locations, determine the general direction of the groundwater flow.

South

What is the trend of storage in the Ogallala aquifer, and what is its cause?

Storage is decreasing. Dewatering is compacting the sediments.

Which of the following are natural substances that can contaminate groundwater?

Sulfur Lead and arsenic from mineralized rocks

What is the difference between surface water and groundwater?

Surface water is on the surface, and groundwater is under the surface.

Lakes contain more freshwater than which of the following?

Swamps Rivers

Which of the following would not be information collected by a hydrogeologist?

The final intended use of the groundwater

Why does the Ogallala aquifer have an uneven base?

The land was eroded before the deposition of the sediments now holding the aquifer.

From the diagram of the slope of a water table, select the correct answer from the following choices.

The long arrow on the diagram represents the highest hydraulic gradient.

What happens to the sediments that are in and below the dewatered zone of an aquifer?

The sediments become compacted.

What might happen to a losing stream as the water passes from flowing over hard, impermeable rocks to flowing over more permeable rocks?

The stream will lose more water to the subsurface and might disappear.

Which of the following are characteristics of the Ogallala aquifer?

The western part is expected to be totally depleted by 2050. It has been overpumped. It is an unconfined aquifer.

In the United States, which of the following is the primary use of freshwater?

Thermoelectric power

Large thermoelectric power plants use a lot of water to generate electricity. How do they use this water?

To generate steam that turns turbines For cooling

Which way is the water flowing in the area indicated by the circle?

To the right

True or false: The percentage of rock or sediment that consists of voids or openings is a measurement of a rock's ability to hold water.

True

True or false: Volatile organic compounds as contaminants is groundwater can be detected by the gases they emit.

True

Which of these would make the poorest aquifer?

Unfractured granite

In an effort to reduce diseases spread through drinking of surface water in Bangladesh, more than 10 million wells were installed to provide clean drinking water from aquifers. Which of the following is the current leading cause of disease in Bangladesh?

Water contamination

Which of the following is not an example of a surface water application with multiple uses?

Water tower

The water table has ______.

a shape similar to that of the land surface lying above it

As the water table drops, the upper section of the original aquifer is now ______ the water table and is dewatered.

above

If you were looking for a steady supply of groundwater, you'd be looking for a(n) ______.

aquifer

The term ______ means that the groundwater is in a confined aquifer and under enough water pressure that the water will rise some amount within a well.

artesian

The water level in a well drilled into an unconfined aquifer will be _______ the aquifer.

at the same level as in

The Ogallala aquifer is located ______.

beneath an area extending from South Dakota to the panhandle of Texas

A wetland can form in an area that is not associated with a high-water table if that area is underlain by ______.

clay-rich deposits

The first step in constructing a water table contour map is to ______.

collect and plot the elevations of the water table in all available wells in an area

As the water table ______, the upper section of the original aquifer is now above the water table and is said to be dewatered.

drops

Several processes are involved in generating rainfall or snow. First, water is ______ from oceans and moves into the atmosphere. Next, the moisture condenses into clouds which cool and release rain or snow as ______.

evaporated; precipitation

Subsidence occurs when groundwater is overpumped from an aquifer. In areas with nonporous rock, such as granite, which cannot be compacted, ______ develop.

fissures

The arrows drawn perpendicular to the contour lines on the contour map shown indicate the direction of the groundwater flow. In this example, the groundwater is ______.

flowing down the slope of the water table from higher contours to lower ones

A stream that receives water from the inflow of groundwater is called a ______.

gaining stream

Some volatile organic compounds can be detected by hydrogeologists in the field or labs because of the ______ emitted from the groundwater and/or soil samples.

gases

There is a larger volume of water in ______.

groundwater compared to surface water

A cone of depression will form if ______.

groundwater is overpumped from an aquifer

Clay has ______ porosity and ______ permeability.

high; low

The slope of a water table is also called the ______.

hydraulic gradient

Groundwater on either side of a groundwater divide flows ______.

in opposite directions

A well should ______ the water table in order to effectively be able to draw water to the surface.

intersect or be below

The shape of the water table ______.

is a subtle expression of the land surface above it

Unconformities, faults, and ______ are geologic settings for springs.

limestone aquifers

When contamination enters groundwater, it typically ______.

moves along with the flowing groundwater down the slope of the water table

In the figure, the lake marked by the letter A is called a perched lake and is above the water table. The lake marked by the letter C is said to be ______.

nearly at equilibrium with the water table

A spring is a place where water flows naturally from rock ______.

onto the land surface

When contamination enters groundwater, it moves along with the direction of the groundwater. The contamination takes on a particular shape called a ______.

plume

Groundwater found in sediment usually moves through ______.

pore spaces

Oceans loose a lot of water through evaporation, but gain it back through runoff and ______.

precipitation

A part of a stream that ______ water from the inflow of groundwater is called a gaining stream. The part of a stream that ______ water to outflow to groundwater is called a losing stream.

receives; loses

Infiltration of surface water into the groundwater system is one type of ______ that replenishes lost water.

recharge

Rivers and irrigation are the primary sources of groundwater ______ in the Snake River Plain.

recharge

A drill log represents information about ______.

rock layers and presence or absence of water

If groundwater wells along coastlines are overpumped, then ______.

saltwater intrusion occurs

Groundwater ______ are taken from wells by geologists to analyze for hazardous chemicals and microbes.

samples

Contamination from the sewage outfall of a septic tank will be filtered if it passes into an area of ______ rather than an area of cavernous ______.

sandstone; limestone

A stream might disappear if it was first flowing over ______ but then changed to flowing over ______.

solid granite; fractured limestone

Recharge to groundwater in the Northern Snake River Plain comes from ______.

the Snake River disappearing rivers irrigation

A perched lake is above the water table. If a perched lake is to remain permanent, then ______.

the amount of inflow of water must be equal to or greater than the amount of outflow and losses to evaporation

Surface water can soak into the subsurface and become part of the groundwater if ______.

the surface material is permeable the water table is deep enough so there is an unsaturated zone into which the water can seep

This geophysical data is used to assess the ______ in a basin. This information is then used groundwater in the basin.

thickness of sediments

The water table is the ______.

top of the zone of saturation

Permeability refers to the capacity of a geologic material to ______.

transmit fluid

The most common type of aquifer is a(n) ______ aquifer, in which the water-bearing unit is open to Earth's surface and atmosphere. A(n) ______ aquifer is separated from Earth's surface by rocks of low permeability.

unconfined; confined

The part of the subsurface where most of the pore spaces are filled with air is the ______ zone (A). The area of subsurface where the pore spaces are filled with water is called the ______ zone (B).

unsaturated; saturated

The permeability of a rock layer on which perched water sits is ______.

very low

Sediments in and below a dewatered area of an aquifer become compacted because ______.

water pressure drops and the pore spaces are closed

Rocks and sediments that have ______ clasts have higher porosity than those that do not.

well-rounded and well-sorted


Related study sets

FON CHAPTER 7 LEGAL DIMENSIONS OF NURSING PRACTICE

View Set

AP Biology Review 8 Intro to Metabolism

View Set

The Conceptual Framework & Qualitative Characteristics of Useful Financial Information - Lecture 1

View Set

Free Energy: Equilibrium Constant and Temperature Effects

View Set

MAG 15 Food and Restaurant Vocabulary

View Set