Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
Introduction
See NBC Thirsty Planet series, e.g. American West
http://www.twainquotes.com/WaterWhiskey.html
East: emphasis on surface water management (rivers, lakes, etc.) and drainage, contamination remediation, and sea water intrusion. Also seawater intrusion. World: world wide water stress (pg. 61) increasing rapidly, causing much suering and potential war. See also decadal summary Upper-vs-lower basin water usage similar to western U.S.Colorado River (p. 33) issues. See also USBR Colo. R. sustainability study Euphrates River (Fig. 3): Turkey vs. Syria and Iraq. Drying of Iraq marshes. Nile River basin (Fig. 4). Egypt vs. Sudan and Ethiopia. See Nile Basin Initiative 3
Declining snowpack: primarily Himalaya, which supplies much of India and south Asia (Fig. 5)
Figure 1: Total precipitation, U.S., 2003. Note large dropo west of the Texas panhandle. After NOAA. 5
Figure 2:
2009.
Figure 3: Euphrates river basin. After WorthNews. See also satellite photos, NPR 2009 of Ataturk Reservoir, Turkey. 7
After
Figure 5: Changes in extent of glaciers in the Western Himalaya [Fig. 1, Prasad and Singh, 2007]. See more immediate problem in Peru. 9
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will result in over half the year with days warmer than 90F by 2100 in North Texas [p. 34, USGCRP, 2009] around 120 days over 100F for North Texas by 2100 [p. 90, USGCRP, 2009] only mild changes in precipitation predicted [p. USGCRP, 2009] 30-31,
warming will lead to increased evapotranspiration by plants, leading to signicant water stress in part of U.S. and midlatitudes worldwide (Fig. 8) Get ready for a wild ride! E.g. Australian example 12 year drought began around 2000, part of a general southern hemisphere drought 13
forced steep decline in rice production, leading to global shortages and conversion to wind production some reservoirs dropped to 12% of normal (compare to Lake Lavon, where at 35% of normal Stage 4 Emergency restrictions apply, no outdoor use of water) drought ended 2010 with heavy rains, reservoirs rising, now at 35% of capacity Australian electorate now becoming quite serious about climate change drought has resumed along west coast (Perth)
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Lake Mead, NV
Lake Mead, NV Monthly Water Elevation 1240 Maximum 1220 1200 1180 1160 1140 Drought 1120 1100 1080 1060 1940 1945 1950 1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 Critical Shortage Average
Figure 6:
Lake Mead, NV monthly water levels 1937-present. Current levels approaching those experienced in shorter
severe droughts 1955 and 1965. Mandatory rationing below shortage line, AZ handles 94% of the rationing, NV the rest. Mead supplies 90% of LV water.
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Figure 7:
Las Vegas-Lake Mead water intake tunnel plan. One of two current intakes is at 1,050 ft elev, and may soon
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Water Trends
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Water Sources
average water usage in U.S. is 30% groundwater (Fig. 9) U.S. water usage trends: Consumptive water use up steadily ratio of groundwater to surface water also generally up, partly due to climate (recent droughts increased groundwater extraction) since 1980 water use down slightly, but ground/surface water ratio increasing (Fig. 9) U.S. Climate trends long term climate predictions are for signicant heating, little precipitation change 20
historical trends show notable warming in the West (1 F /decade) since 1970, and increase in precipitation
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Figure 9: Total water usage by source in the U.S., 1950-2005. Groundwater use is steadily increasing, total and surface water use has leveled o. See USGS, and [Hutson et al., 2004]. 22
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Water Usage
average groundwater usage in western U.S. is much higher average groundwater usage in Texas 60%, and generally increasing with time (Fig. 11) largest users in west are agricultural irrigation, but this is declining, partly in favor of municipal use (Fig. 12) 94% of NTX use is surface water. Current status of N. Texas reservoirs or NOAA
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Figure 11: Sources of consumed water, Texas, 1974-1993. Texas Water Resources Planning Commision. 25
Figure 12: Water usage categories, Texas, 1974 (left), 1993 (middle) and
2008 (right). Municipal usage (blue in right two gures, green on left) has grown from 12% in 1974 to 22% in 1993 to 25% in 2002. Concomitantly irrigation usage has declined from 78% to 68% to 62% respectively. Texas Water Resources Planning Commission and TWDB.
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Figure 13: Projected water usage by categories, Texas. From Texas Water Plan 2002. Municipal usage will increase more rapidly than decrease in irrigation. 27
200
180
160
140
120
Tucson, AZ
RICHARDSON
FORT WORTH
AMARILLO
Figure 14: 2006 Estimated water usage for Texas cities with population
greater than 95,000. Richardson has the greatest usage, nearly double that of San Antonio, and higher than Las Vegas. Data from TWDB, see also Texas Comptroller.
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SAN ANTONIO
Las Vegas, NV
HOUSTON
AUSTIN
100
MIDLAND
EL PASO
PLANO
WACO
DALLAS
Figure 15: Projected groundwater availability, Texas major aquifers. From Texas Water Plan 2002. See aquifer map for locations. 29
HEMPHILL
New Mexico Te x a s
OLDHAM
40
POTTER Amarillo
CARSON
GRAY
WHEELER
Oklahoma Te x a s
DEAF SMITH
RANDALL
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ARMSTRONG
Pr
DONLEY
ai
ri
PARMER
CASTRO
o g To w n
SWISHER
BRISCOE
BAILEY
LAMB
HALE
FLOYD
MOTLEY
COCHRAN
YOAKUM
TERRY
LYNN
GARZA
Already Below 30 feet Less than 15 years 16 to 30 years 31 to 50 years 51 to 75 years 76 to 100 years
Perennial Stream
GAINES
DAWSON
BORDEN
County Boundary Ogallala Aquifer Extent Outside of Texas Land Surface Over the Ogallala Aquifer in West Texas
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40
ANDREWS
MARTIN
HOWARD
ad
MIDLAND
GLASSCOCK
iv
er
Figure 16: Projections for usable lifetime of Ogallalla Aquifer, Texas Panhandle. From TTU. 30
CROSBY
DICKENS
B
az
os
Ri
ve
Co
lo
Figure 18:
snowpack. From Climate Change and Water Resources Factsheet. Lake Lavon can hold 275,000 acre-ft of water. See 2007-2009 summary , note 2008 La Ni na event. Also interactive prediction maps.
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What Hydrologists Do
primarily addressed water supply issues until 1970s (i.e. nding water) emphasis on contamination issues since creation of EPA requires a much more quantitative approach typically involving governmental regulations and/or lawyers current emphasis on doing nothing: nding and preserving uncontaminated water supplies, establishing natural attenuation as the typical remediation approach also Brownelds (development of contaminated properties, e.g. American Airlines Center) now returning to water supply issues given the problems of drought, global warming and full allocation of resources 33
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Denitions
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Denitions
Ground Water: two overlapping denitions subsurface water that occurs beneath the water table in porous geologic formations that are fully saturated that portion of subsurface water that can be collected with wells, drainage pipes etc., or that ow naturally to the surface via springs and seeps (NOTE: not all subsurface water is groundwater) important to remember there is accessible and inaccessible water in the subsurface
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Denitions (cont.)
Ground Water Hydrology: the study of the origin, distribution, movement and physical/chemical properties of ground water. A subset of hydrology, the study of all terrestrial waters. Surface Water Hydrology: the study of subaerial waters (in contact with the atmosphere), excluding oceans. Civil engineers usually mean lakes and bays, geologists usually mean rivers and streams when using this term. Hydrogeology: emphasizes the hydrologic aspects of geology, e.g. lithologic or facies inuences on groundwater movement Geohydrology: emphasizing geologic aspects of hydrology, 37
particularly the eects of the porous medium through which groundwater ows. in principle Hydrogeology and Geohydrology have dierent meanings, in common usage they are identical Hydrosphere: that region of the Earth occupied by water, including lakes, rivers, oceans, subsurface water, glaciers, +/- atmospheric water (clouds, vapor, precipitation)
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evaporation or transpiration (uptake by plants and release to atmosphere) inltration that makes it to the water table becomes groundwater, and is termed recharge while inltrated water is above the water table, it forms an unsaturated (or vadose) zone where pores are lled with a mixture of air and water. Pore pressure is negative in this zone. groundwater in the saturated zone is found in aquifers (rocks through which water travels most easily). These are generally separated by aquitards (water travels slowly through these) or aquicludes (impermeable zones or layers) 41
within the aquifer, water occupies the accessible pore space in the rock (some pores may be blocked o, or permanently occupied by something else. The accessible space is referred to as the eective porosity groundwater that discharges into a stream is termed baseow (total ow in the stream is runo)
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Figure 19: An illustration of the hydrologic cycle. After online textbook. See ux estimates (p. 5) for water balance. 43
Water Balance
much of hydrology is based on determining the water balance for all or some part of the hydrosphere (e.g. a groundwater basin) water balance is just a mass balance: rate of mass in rate of mass out = change in content
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Groundwater Basics
Some good online resources are now available to provide overviews of hydrology. My current favorite is the USGS Basic groundwater hydrology publication [Heath, 1987]. The classic textbook Freeze and Cherry [1979] is now quite old, but is one of the few calculusbased geologic hydrology texts (much more readable than civil engineering texts).
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Aquifer Types
See also Fig. 20: conning layer (aquiclude): low-permeability bed or unit conned aquifer: an aquifer overlain by a conning layer unconned aquifer (phreatic or water table): water table lies below the top of the aquifer semi-conned: an aquifer exhibiting conned and unconned behavior at dierent locations (e.g. a sand layer in an alluvial fan) 46
artesian: can simply mean conned, in common usage it means an aquifer from which water will ow upward to the surface given an appropriate conduit (e.g. a borehole) perched: a saturated zone lying above unsaturated rock
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Aquifer Features
Figure 20: Important features of groundwater systems, including aquifer/aquitard, water table, etc. After Heath [1987]. 48
the undulating plane below the ground surface at which pore water pressure is equal to atmospheric also the dividing line between the unsaturated and saturated zones Phreatic surface: the level to which water will rise in a well open only within the aquifer dierent than the water table only for conned aquifers when phreatic surface lies at or above the ground surface, an artesian well or spring is possible 49
Motivating Examples
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expanding steadily with time (2010 is largest ever measured, area the size of New Jersey)
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Other Resources
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Useful Links
This is intended to be an ever-evolving list of useful links on the general topic of this note set. groundwater extraction is 40% of sea level rise [Pokhrel et al., 2012]
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Bibliography
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Tim P. Barnett and David W. Pierce. When will Lake Mead go dry? Water Resour. Res., 44 (W03201), 29 March 2008. doi: 10.1029/2007WR006704. URL http://www.agu.org/ journals/pip/wr/2007WR006704-pip.pdf.
CENR. Integrated Assessment of Hypoxia in the Northern Gulf of Mexico. Report, National Science and Technology Council Committee on Environment and Natural Resources, Washington, D.C., May 2000. URL http://oceanservice.noaa.gov/products/hypox_ finalfront.pdf.
R. C. Heath. Basic ground-water hydrology. Water Supply Paper 2220, U.S. Geol. Survey, Denver, CO, 1987. URL http://water.usgs.gov/pubs/wsp/wsp2220/.
S. S. Hutson, N. L. Barber, J. F. Kenny, K. S. Linsey, D. S. Lumia, and M. A. Maupin. Estimated use of water in the united states in 2000. Circular 1268, U. S. Geol. Survey, Reston, VA, May 2004. URL http://water.usgs.gov/pubs/circ/2004/circ1268/.
IPCC4. Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis, Summary for Policymakers (4th Climate Assessment Report). Technical report, U.N. Intergov. Panel on Climate Change, 5 February 2007. URL http://www.ipcc.ch/SPM2feb07.pdf. 18 pp.
Jonathan Overpeck and Bradley Udall. Dry times ahead. Science, 328(5986):16421643, 2010. doi: 10.1126/science.1186591. URL http://www.sciencemag.org.
Yadu N. Pokhrel, Naota Hanasaki, Pat J-F Yeh, Tomohito J. Yamada, Shinjiro Kanae, and Taikan Oki. Model estimates of sea-level change due to anthropogenic impacts on terrestrial water storage. Nature Geosci, advance online publication, May 2012. ISSN 1752-0908. doi: 10.1038/ngeo1476. URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ngeo1476.
A. K. Prasad and R. P. Singh. Changes in Himalayan Snow and Glacier Cover Between 1972 and 2000. EOS, 88(33):326, 17 August 2007. doi: 10.1029/2007EO330002.
W. E. Stegner. Beyond the Hundredth Meridian: John Wesley Powell and the Second Opening of the West. Houghton Miin, Boston, 1954.
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USGCRP. Global Climate Change Impacts in the United States. Cambridge University Press, 2009. URL http://www.globalchange.gov/publications/reports/ scientific-assessments/us-impacts. Quadrennial report to U.S. Congress.