Title: Water Chapter 11
1Water Chapter 11
- Where has that water you drank today been?
2Water Cycle
- Earth is the water planet
- 71 water
- Solid, liquid, gas
- Part of the closed system
- recycles
3The Water Cycle
4Water Distribution
- 71 of earths surface
- 97 of water is salt water
- Of 3 freshwater, 77 is frozen in glaciers and
polar icecaps - 22 is groundwater,
- Only 1 of fresh water is available for human use
5Global Water Distribution
6Surface Water
- Freshwater on Earths land surface
- Lakes, rivers, streams, wetlands
- River system---flows downhillrainwater drains
into streams, rivers, - Mississippi
- Amazon--largest
- Nile
- Watershed
- The land that is drained by a river
- Varies throughout the year
- Changes can result in floods(spring) or
drought(summer/fall)
7Watersheds
8Groundwater
- Water beneath the Earths surface in sediment and
rock formations - Water tablethe level to which rocks and soil are
saturated - Can be at the surface or
- Deep underground
- Aquiferunderground formation containing water
- Largest in USOgallala in the Great Plains
- Porosity-- of spaces (pores) in rock
- Permeabilitythe ability of water to flow through
rock or soil - Permeableallow flowgravel, sand
- Impermeablewill not allow flowgranite, clay
9Recharge Zone
- An area of the Earths surface from which water
percolates down into an aquifer - Can take 10,000 years or more to recharge
- Affected by permeability of the surface above
- Parking lots?
- Farm land?
10The Recharge Zone
11Wells
- A hole dug to reach groundwater
- Naturally filtered
- How deep depends on the water table
12Water Use and Management
- We all live downstream
- More than 1 billion people lack access to a
clean, reliable source of fresh water - How does your water supply depend on what is done
to it upstream??
13Global Water Use
- Most used to irrigate crops
- Asia80 for agriculture
- Europe38 for ag
- Industry19
- 1000 L needed for 1 kg of Aluminum
- 500,000 L for 1 car
- Household usesdrinking, washing, cooking8
14Image and Activity Bank
15Image and Activity Bank
16Residential Water Use
- U.S. 300 L/person/day
- India 41 L/person/day
- 2L 1 gal
17Water Treatment
- Potable safe to drink
- Removes mercury, lead, arsenic which are
poisonous, even at low concentrations - Removes pathogensorganisms that cause
illnessbacteria, viruses, protozoa, parasitic
worms - P. 296-297treatment process
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19Cleaning up Water Pollution-Cuyahoga River fire
1969
20Water Management Projects
- 2000 years agoRoman aquaducts
- Dams and reservoirs
- Dam is built across a river to control flow
- Reservoir is an artificial lake behind the dam
- Flood control, drinking water, irrigation,
recreation, industry, energy (hydropower) - Possible Consequences
- Ecosystems disrupted or destroyed
- People displaced
- Soil deposition slowed
- Dam bursts
- Short lifespan of structure
- Diversion projectsKissimmee River and Everglades
for example
21Water Conservation
- Agriculture--Drip irrigation systems
- Industryrecycling of cooling water and
wastewater - At home
- Low flow shower heads and toilets
- Water lawns at night
- Grow drought resistant plantsxeriscaping
22Future Solutions
- Desalinationremoving salt from ocean
waterrequires much energy - Transporting Water
- shipped or trucked
- Towing icebergs
- Both require lots of energy
23Water Pollution
- The introduction of chemical, physical, or
biological agents into the water that degrade
water quality and adversely affect the organisms
that depend on the water - Causes
- Industrialization
- Rapid human population growth
24Groundwater Pollution
25Point-Source Pollution (PS)
- Pollution comes from a single, identifiable
source - Enforcement of cleanup can still be a problem
26Nonpoint-Source Pollution (NPS)
- Come from many different sources that are often
difficult to identify - River-pollution can come from any of the land in
its watershed - Common sources
- Livestock feedlots
- Street and road runoff
- Soil runoff from farms, construction sites
- Oil/gas from boats
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28Image and Activity Bank
29Types of Water Pollutants
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31Wastewaterfrom homes or industries
- Treatment
- Most contains biodegradable material that can be
broken down by organisms - Toxic substances much harder to remove
- Chemicals, heavy metals
32Drinking-Water Treatment
33Post-treatment
- Sewage Sludgesolid material remaining after
treatment - May contain toxic materials
- Must be disposed of as a hazardous wastes
- Often burned, then ashes buried in a secure
landfill - If toxicity reduced
- May be used as a fertilizer
- Combined with clay for bricks
34Artificial Eutrophication
- Eutrophication
- 1. large amount of organisms (plant material) in
water - 2. When they die, are decomposed
- 3. Oxygen depleted
- 4. Organisms needed oxygen die
- Can be a natural process in succession.
35Artificial Eutrophication
- When nutrients enter water as a result of mans
activities - Farm runoff, fertilizersphosphorus and nitrogen
- Sewage and animal feces
- Laundry and dishwashing detergents
- Cause algal blooms
- Oxygen is depleted
36Thermal pollution
- From power plants and other industries
- Fish and other organisms have a temperature range
they can tolerate - Too warm, too cold, they die
- Temperature change affects the oxygen content of
the water (colder holds more) - Warmer water holds less oxygen
37Groundwater Pollution
- When polluted surface water percolates down into
groundwater - Pesticides, fertilizers, petroleum products
- Leaking underground storage tanksgas stations
- Saltwater intrusionwhen aquifers near seawater
drops too low - Clean up VERY difficult
38Ocean Pollution
- 85 comes from activities on landrunoff and
rivers - Illegal dumping
- Oil spills
- Exxon Valdez1989-Prince William Sound Alaska
- 2001 off coast of Galapagos
- Each year 37 million gallons from oil spills
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40Results of Oil Spills
- Fish, birds die
- Oil lasts a very long time
- Cleanup efforts are very difficult
41Water Pollution and Ecosystems
- Can cause immediate and long term damage
- Many accumulatedont decompose quickly or at
allHg, Pbheavy metals - Biomagnificationthe top predators end up with
the highest concentration of toxic materials in
their tissues
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43Federal Laws on Water Quality
- 1972Clean Water Act (CWA)
- banned pollutant discharge into surface water
- required metals be removed from wastewater
44- 1972, Amended 1988Marine Protection, Research,
and Santuaries Act - --empowered the EPA to control the dumping of
sewage wastes and toxic chemicals in U.S. waters
451975, amended 1996Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA)
- Programs to protect groundwater and surface water
- Standards for drinking water quality
- publics right-to-know
461980CERCLAComprehensive Environmental Response
Compensation and Liability Act
- Superfund Act
- Makes owners, operators, and customers of
hazardous waste sites monetarily responsible for
the cleanup of the sites
471987Water Quality Act
- Loaned funds to pay for new wastewater treatment
plants - Created programs to protect major estuaries
481990Oil Pollution Act
- Required oil tankers be double-hulled by 2015