Title: Construction Technology: Substructure
1Construction Technology Substructure DW57
34 Outcome 2 Methods of groundwater control
2Water in the ground
- These kids probably think there is some kind of
magic happening here ... they pull down a lever
and out of the ground below their feet comes
clear, cool freshwater. They (and maybe you) may
not realize that there is an immense amount of
water in aquifers below the earth's surface. In
fact, there is a hundred times more water in the
ground than is in all the world's rivers and
lakes.
3Water in the ground
- Some water underlies the Earth's surface almost
everywhere, beneath hills, mountains, plains, and
deserts. - It is not always accessible, or fresh enough for
use without treatment, and it's sometimes
difficult to locate or to measure and describe. - This water may occur close to the land surface,
as in a marsh, or it may lie many hundreds of
feet below the surface, as in some arid areas of
the West. - Water at very shallow depths might be just a few
hours old at moderate depth, it may be 100 years
old and at great depth or after having flowed
long distances from places of entry, water may be
several thousands of years old
4Water in the ground
- Groundwater occurs only close to the Earth's
surface. - There must be space between the rock particles
for groundwater to occur, and the Earth's
material becomes denser with more depth. - Essentially, the weight of the rocks above
condense the rocks below and squeeze out the open
pore spaces deeper in the Earth. - That is why groundwater can only be found within
a few miles of the Earth's surface. - The water within the ground slowly moves towards
streams, lakes, marshes and oceans as shown
above. Most rivers receive about half of their
flow from the water in the ground. This is why
rivers can keep flowing for weeks after no rain.
5Water in the ground
- The presence of water in soil voids and rock
fissures has a major impact on the engineering
behaviour of the ground. - Difficulties with soils can be due to the water
contained in the voids and not the actual soil
itself. - A high water-table can present difficulties with
foundation excavations and reduce the bearing
resistance of the ground. - The presence of chemicals in groundwater, such as
acids and sulphates, can cause damage to
foundation concrete if it is not of an
appropriate quality. - Groundwater can cause unacceptable humidity
levels around a building or structure.
6So where does all this water come from?
The stages of the hydrological cycle
7Rainfall
- Ultimate source of all fresh water. When it lands
on the ground it can be dispersed in three ways - Evapotranspiration evaporation from open water
and transpiration by plants - Runoff surface water flowing into streams and
rivers - Infiltration seepage into ground to become
groundwater
8The principal source of groundwater is
precipitation (rainfall). While much of this
water may be lost as surface run-off or by
evaporation and transpiration to the atmosphere,
some of the water enters the ground and moves
downwards by infiltration through the continuous
soil voids.
The relationships between the processes of
infiltration, run-off, evaporation and
transpiration are influenced by climate,
topography, vegetation and geology.
9Groundwater
- all water flowing through or stored within the
ground, in both rocks and soils - derived from infiltration
- lost by flow to surface springs and seepage out
through seabed
10Water Table
- Level in the rocks below which all voids are
water filled - Generally follows the surface topography, but
with less relief - It meets the ground surface at lakes and most
rivers
11Water Table
- The water table can change depending on a number
of factors - Seasons (dry summers, wet winters)
- Vegetation such as trees
- How the water occurs, eg liquid, solid or gas
12Water Table
- Rain the more rain the higher the water table.
Flooding can occur where there is excessive rain.
Some rain evaporates soon after it falls and some
drains on the surface to join watercourses
13Water Table
- Snow semi solid format of rain. More snow would
increase the water table.
14Water Table
- Sea the water table moves close to the sea as
the tide comes in or out. - Watercourses such as rivers or burns the water
table will be higher the closer it is to a
watercourse. - Marsh land the soil is retaining water. Water
table is either on the surface or just below it
15Water Table
- Soil type if the soil retains the water, such
as clays, this could disturb the water table.
Dependent on how permeable the soil is - Underlying geological structures the nature of
the bedrock below could push the water table to
peaks if it is folded, faulted or fractured
depending upon pressure. - Burst water main this would lead to a high
water table
16Water Table
- Floodplain area of land around a river where
the river encroaches onto when it exceeds its
channel capacity
17Groundwater that is in direct contact vertically
with the atmosphere through permeable ground with
continuous open spaces, such as pores and voids
in soils and fissures in rock, is termed
unconfined.
- Confined water is separated from the atmosphere
by impermeable ground. - Confined water is sometimes described as artesian
when the pressure in the groundwater corresponds
to a head of water which is above ground level. - The first unconfined water to be encountered may
be at a perched water-table the perched water is
isolated from groundwater at deeper levels by an
impermeable layer.
18Tutorial
- What are the sources of water in the ground?
- What is the water table and how might it be
affected? - Draw a section indicating where you might find
perched water, a confined aquifer and an
unconfined aquifer.