Groundwater Pollution - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Groundwater Pollution

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... Condensation [ ] Evaporation [ ] Evapotranspiration [ ] Freshwater storage [ ] Ground-water discharge [ ] Ground-water storage ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Groundwater Pollution


1
Groundwater Pollution
  • Week 1 0304 Introduction to Groundwater

2
  • Water in three states liquid, solid (ice), and
    water vapor in the air. Clouds are water
    droplets, condensed from vapor-saturated air.

3
  • Water changes from one state to another. So water
    can be solid, liquid or gas.
  • Water also moves.
  • We call this the Water Cycle.

4
  • http//ga.water.usgs.gov/edu/watercyclekoreanhi.ht
    ml

5
  • http//ga.water.usgs.gov/edu/watercycleprint.html

6
  • cycle ??
  • circulation move around something like a circle.

7
1.72, Groundwater Hydrology Lecture Packet 1
Prof. Charles Harvey http//ocw.mit.edu/NR/rdonly
res/Civil-and-Environmental-Engineering/1-72Fall-2
005/4F444E12-8746-459D-A6BD-1F42F7498903/0/1_72_le
cture_1.pdf
8
1.72, Groundwater Hydrology Lecture Packet 1
Prof. Charles Harvey http//ocw.mit.edu/NR/rdonly
res/Civil-and-Environmental-Engineering/1-72Fall-2
005/4F444E12-8746-459D-A6BD-1F42F7498903/0/1_72_le
cture_1.pdf
9
1.72, Groundwater Hydrology Lecture Packet 1
Prof. Charles Harvey http//ocw.mit.edu/NR/rdonly
res/Civil-and-Environmental-Engineering/1-72Fall-2
005/4F444E12-8746-459D-A6BD-1F42F7498903/0/1_72_le
cture_1.pdf
10
1.72, Groundwater Hydrology Lecture Packet 1
Prof. Charles Harvey http//ocw.mit.edu/NR/rdonly
res/Civil-and-Environmental-Engineering/1-72Fall-2
005/4F444E12-8746-459D-A6BD-1F42F7498903/0/1_72_le
cture_1.pdf
11
  • A lot of water is used for agriculture
  • 56 is used by animals and plants
  • 20 is lost when the water is moved
  • 24 flows back into the stream or ground
  • A lot of water is used for making electricity
  • 87 of all industrial water use

1.72, Groundwater Hydrology Lecture Packet 1
Prof. Charles Harvey http//ocw.mit.edu/NR/rdonly
res/Civil-and-Environmental-Engineering/1-72Fall-2
005/4F444E12-8746-459D-A6BD-1F42F7498903/0/1_72_le
cture_1.pdf
12
  • Water can dissolve many things.
  •  
  • Water consists of two atoms of hydrogen and one
    of oxygen, which give it a chemical formula of
    H2O.

13
  • Water can dissolve at least small amounts of
    almost all substances that it contacts.
  • Ground water usually contains the largest amounts
    of dissolved solids.

14
  • The composition and concentration of substances
    dissolved in unpolluted ground water depend on
    the chemical composition of precipitation, on the
    biologic and chemical reactions occurring on the
    land surface and in the soil zone, and on the
    mineral composition of the aquifers and confining
    beds through which the water moves.

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  • The concentrations of substances dissolved in
    water are in units of weight per volume.
  • In the International System (SI), the most
    commonly used units are milligrams per liter.

22
  • A milligram equals 1/1,000 (0.001) of a gram,
  • and a liter equals 1/1,000 of a cubic meter, so
  • 1 mg/L equals 1 gram m-3.

23
  • Because the concentration of most substances
    dissolved in water is relatively small, the
    weight per weight unit commonly used is parts per
    million (ppm).

24
Natural inorganic constituents commonly dissolved
in water that are most likely to affect use of
the water.
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      Condensation       Evaporation
      Evapotranspiration       Freshwater storage
      Ground-water discharge       Ground-water storage
      Infiltration       Precipitation
      Snowmelt runoff to streams       Spring
      Streamflow       Sublimation
      Surface runoff       Water storage in the atmosphere
      Water storage in ice and snow       Water storage in oceans
      Desublimation       Plant uptake

27
Pollution of Groundwater
  •  Pollution of ground water is any loss of quality
    of the water because of what people do.

28
  • Most pollution of ground water comes from the
    disposal of wastes on the land surface, in
    shallow holes including septic tanks, or through
    deep wells and mines the use of fertilizers and
    other agricultural chemicals leaks in sewers,
    storage tanks, and pipelines and animal feedlots
    (excreta).

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  • The size of any pollution problem depends on the
    size of the area affected and the amount of the
    pollutant involved, the solubility, toxicity, and
    density of the pollutant, the mineral composition
    and hydraulic characteristics of the soils and
    rocks through which the pollutant moves, and the
    effect or potential effect on ground-water use.

35
  • Affected areas range in size from point sources,
    such as septic tanks, to large urban areas having
    leaky sewer systems and numerous municipal and
    industrial waste-disposal sites.

36
  • Nearly all substances are soluble to some extent
    in water, and many chemical wastes are highly
    toxic even in minute (very small) concentrations.

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38
Effects of Contamination
  • Why do we care if there was only 1ppm
    (1/1,000,000) of a particular contaminant?
  • It seems like too small of a number to matter.

39
  • With groundwater contaminants, both chemical and
    biological, a very small concentration of
    contaminant could still lead to serious health
    effects.
  • Different kinds of contaminants have different
    concentration limits at which they start to
    effect us or the environment.

40
  • In dealing with groundwater contamination
    problems, it is necessary to find out both the
    specific type of contaminant and the
    concentration of the contaminant.

41
  • The concentration of different contaminants in
    the groundwater.
  • Mr. Blue reacts in the same way a healthy person
    would to these chemicals.
  • A person who is not as healthy, such as an older
    person or a small child, might suffer the effects
    even more.
  • http//techalive.mtu.edu/meec/module04/Contaminati
    onEffects.html

42
  • Which chemical needs to exist in the least
    concentration in the groundwater in order to
    avoid hurting someone?

43
Density
  • The density of a liquid substance - that is, the
    weight per unit volume of the substance relative
    to that of water - affects its underground
    movement.

44
  • Densities range from those of petroleum products
    that are less dense than water other substances
    that are denser than water.

45
  • Substances less dense than water stay at the top
    of the saturated zone if, like petroleum, they
    are immiscible, they will tend to spread in all
    directions as a thin film.

46
  • Substances denser than water tend to move
    downward through the saturated zone to the first
    extensive confining bed.

47
Contaminant Movement
  • Contaminants can enter the groundwater by seeping
    in from the surface or by flowing in from another
    part of the aquifer. Once in the aquifer they
    move with the groundwater flow.

48
  • As contamination moves it disperses. This means
    that the concentration decreases as it moves
    farther away from the source of the pollution.
    For that reason there are different
    concentrations of contaminants at different
    points in the aquifer.

49
  • The mineral composition and physical
    characteristics of soils and rocks through which
    pollutants move may affect the pollutants in
    several ways.

50
  • If a pollutant enters the ground at a "point," it
    will be dispersed longitudinally and laterally in
    granular materials so that its concentration will
    be reduced in the direction of movement.

51
  • The visual representation of these different
    concentrations is called a contamination plume.
    How the plume looks depends on the type of
    contamination source, the specific
    contaminant(s), where the aquifers are located,
    and different soils in that area.

52
  • These animations show the two main categories of
    plumes based upon their source.
  •  
  • Here are two animations of the Dispersal of a
    Pollutant from a Point source
  • http//techalive.mtu.edu/meec/module04/OneTimePlum
    e.html (Click Play)
  • http//techalive.mtu.edu/meec/module04/ContinuousP
    lume.html (Click Play)

53
Organic Substances
  • Organic substances and other biodegradable
    materials tend to be broken down both by
    oxidation and by bacterial action in the
    unsaturated zone.

54
  • Certain earth materials, especially clays and
    organic matter, may also absorb trace metals and
    certain complex organic pollutants and reduce
    their concentration as they move through the
    underground environment.

55
  • The hydraulic characteristics of the soils and
    rocks determine the path taken by and the rate of
    movement of pollutants.

56
  • Substances dissolved in water move with the water
    except when they are tied up or delayed by
    adsorption.

57
  • The movement of pollutants is most through the
    most permeable zones the farther their point of
    origin from a ground-water discharge area, the
    deeper they penetrate into the ground-water
    system and the larger the area ultimately
    affected.

58
  • The movement of pollutants must be carefully
    considered in the selection of waste-disposal
    sites, animal feedlots, and sites for other
    operations that may cause ground-water pollution.

59
  • Here is an animation to allow you to Pick the
    Best Site for a New Well
  •  
  • http//techalive.mtu.edu/meec/module06/WellSiting.
    htm
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