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Chapter 17 Water: Resources and Pollution

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Title: Chapter 17 Water: Resources and Pollution


1
Chapter 17 Water Resources and Pollution
"Water will be more important than oil this
century. - Former U.N. Secretary General Boutros
Boutros Gali
2
Ch 17 Outline
  • Hydrologic Cycle
  • Major Water Compartments
  • Water Availability and Use
  • Types of Water Use
  • Freshwater Shortages
  • Dams and Diversions
  • Increasing Water Supplies

3
Objectives
  • 17.1 Explain why water is a precious
    resource and why shortages occur.
  • 17.2 Compare major water compartments.
  • 17.3 Summarize water availability and use.
  • 17.4 Investigate freshwater shortages.
  • 17.5 Illustrate the benefits and problems of
    dams and diversions.
  • 17.6 Understand how we might increase water
    supplies.

4
Why is Water Important?
  • Necessary for all life to exist.
  • Next to antibiotics, single biggest increase in
    human life span is due to having access to clean
    water.
  • Diseases/toxins transmitted by contaminated
    water
  • Intestinal disease (cholera/dysentery)
  • Arsenic poisoning
  • Mercury poisoning

5
Average Annual Precipitation
6
Hydrologic Cycle
  • The water on earth is continually recycled.
  • The hydrologic cycle describes this circulation
  • Water evaporates from wet land, lakes, or oceans
    and transpires from plants as they dry up.
  • Enters the atmosphere, which is much colder,
    condenses and falls as precipitation.
  • Moves underground by infiltration or runs off
    into rivers, lakes, or the ocean.

7
Hydrologic Cycle
  • Solar energy drives the hydrologic cycle by
    evaporating surface water.
  • Evaporation - changing liquid to a vapor below
    its boiling point
  • Sublimation - changing water between solid and
    gaseous states without ever becoming liquid

8
Hydrologic Cycle
  • Humidity - amount of water vapor in the air
  • Saturation point - when a volume of air contains
    as much water vapor as it can hold at a given
    temperature
  • Relative humidity - amount of water vapor in the
    air expressed as a percentage of the maximum
    amount that can be held at that temperature

9
Hydrologic Cycle
  • Dew point - temperature at which condensation
    occurs for a given amount of water vapor
  • Condensation nuclei - tiny particles that
    facilitate condensation
  • Smoke, dust, sea salt, spores
  • A cloud is an mixture of condensed water vapor in
    droplets or ice crystals. When droplets become
    large enough, gravity overcomes air currents and
    precipitation occurs.

10
Regions of Plenty and Regions of Deficit
  • Three principal factors control global water
    deficits and surpluses
  • Global atmospheric circulation
  • Proximity to water sources
  • Topography

11
Regions of Plenty and Regions of Deficit
  • Mountains act as cloud formers and rain catchers.
  • Air sweeps up the windward side of a mountain,
    pressure decreases, and the air cools.
  • Eventually saturation point is reached, and
    moisture in the air condenses.
  • Rain falls on the mountaintop.
  • Cool, dry air descends and warms, absorbing
    moisture from other sources (Rain shadow).

12
Rain Shadow Hawaiian style
13
Earths Water Budget
All water
Oceans and saline lakes 97.4
14
Earths Water Budget
All water
Oceans and saline lakes 97.4
15
Earths Water Budget
All water
Fresh water
Readily accessible fresh water
Groundwater 0.592
Biota 0.0001
Rivers 0.0001
Lakes 0.007
0.014
Fresh water 2.6
Atmospheric water vapor 0.001
Oceans and saline lakes 97.4
Ice caps and glaciers 1.984
Soil moisture 0.005
16
Major Water Compartments
  • 1. Oceans
  • Together, oceans contain more than 97 of all
    liquid water in the world.
  • Contain 90 of worlds living biomass
  • Moderate earths temperature
  • Gulf Stream carries 100X more water than all
    rivers on earth.
  • Average residence time of water in the ocean is
    about 3,000 years

17
Major Water Compartments
  • 2. Glaciers, Ice, and Snow
  • 2.4 of worlds water is classified as fresh.
  • 90 is frozen in glaciers, ice caps, and
    snowfields
  • As recently as 18,000 years ago, one-third of
    continental landmass was covered by glacial ice
    sheets.
  • Now, Antarctic glaciers contain nearly 85 of all
    ice in the world.
  • Greenland, together with ice floating around the
    North Pole, is another 10.

18
Major Water Compartments
  • 3. Groundwater
  • Second largest reservoir of fresh water
  • Infiltration - process of water percolating
    through the soil and into fractures and permeable
    rocks
  • Zone of aeration - upper soil layers that hold
    both air and water
  • Zone of saturation - lower soil layers where all
    spaces are filled with water
  • Water table - top of zone of saturation

19
Infiltration
20
Groundwater
  • Aquifers - Porous layers of sand, gravel, or rock
    lying below the water table.
  • Aquifers are separate from groundwater they are
    usually isolated by layers of rock.
  • Artesian Well Directly tapes into an aquifer as
    a source of water.

21
Groundwater
  • The recharge zone is an area where water
    infiltrates and refills an aquifer.
  • Recharge rate is often very slow, depending on
    the size of the recharge zone and how often it
    rains there.

22
Major Water Compartments
  • Rivers and Streams
  • Precipitation that does not evaporate or
    infiltrate into the ground runs off the surface,
    back toward the sea.
  • Best measure of water volume carried by a river
    is discharge (cfs).
  • The amount of water that passes a fixed point in
    a given amount of time

23
Major Water Compartments
  • Lakes and Ponds
  • Ponds are generally considered small bodies of
    water shallow enough for rooted plants to grow
    over most of the bottom.
  • Lakes are inland depressions that hold standing
    fresh water year-round.
  • Both ponds and lakes will eventually fill with
    sediment, or be emptied by an outlet stream.

24
Major Water Compartments
  • Wetlands
  • Play a vital role in hydrologic cycle
  • Lush plant growth stabilizes soil and retards
    surface runoff, allowing more aquifer
    infiltration.
  • Disturbance reduces natural water-absorbing
    capacity, resulting in floods and erosion in
    wet periods, and less water flow the rest of the
    year.
  • Half of U.S. wetlands are gone.
  • Can hold excess water during flooding.

25
Major Water Compartments
  • The Atmosphere
  • Among the smallest water reservoirs
  • Contains lt 0.001 of total water supply
  • Has most rapid turnover rate
  • Provides mechanism for distributing fresh water
    over landmasses and replenishing terrestrial
    reservoirs

26
Water Availability and Use
  • Renewable Water Supplies
  • Made up of surface runoff plus infiltration into
    accessible freshwater aquifers
  • About two-thirds of water carried in rivers and
    streams annually occurs in seasonal floods too
    large or violent to be stored effectively for
    human use.

27
Drought Cycles
  • Every continent has regions of scarce rainfall
    due to topographic effects or wind currents.
  • Water shortages have most severe effect in
    semiarid zones where moisture availability is the
    critical factor in plant and animal
    distributions.
  • U.S. seems to have 30 year drought cycle.
  • Dust Bowl in 1930s

28
Drought Cycles
  • Much of Western U.S. is still plagued by drought
    and overexploitation of limited supply of water.
  • El Nino plays an important role in determining
    when North America has drought.
  • Global warming may make droughts more frequent
    and severe.

29
Water Consumption
  • Withdrawal - total amount of water taken from a
    source
  • Consumption - fraction of withdrawn water made
    unavailable for other purposes (not returned to
    its source)
  • Degradation - Change in water quality due to
    contamination making it unsuitable for desired
    use. Much water that is not consumed is
    nevertheless polluted.

30
Water Use is Increasing
  • Many societies have always treated water as an
    inexhaustible resource.
  • Natural cleansing and renewing functions of
    hydrologic cycle do not work properly if systems
    are overloaded or damaged
  • Renewal of water takes time
  • Rate at which we are now using water makes
    conservation necessary

31
Quantities of Water Used
  • Human water use has been increasing about twice
    as fast as population growth over the past
    century, but impact varies with location.
  • Canada withdraws less than 1 of its renewable
    supply per year.
  • In Israel, groundwater and surface water
    withdrawals equal more than 100 of the renewable
    supply. Obviously, this is not sustainable.

32
Agricultural Water Use
  • Water use is divided into agriculture, domestic
    use and industrial use.
  • Worldwide, agriculture claims about two-thirds of
    total water withdrawal and 85 of consumption.
  • Aral Sea, once the fourth largest inland body of
    water in world, has been drained.
  • Lake Chad in northern Africa went from 400,000
    sq. km to less than 1,000 sq. km.

33
Exhibit A
  • During the late 1940s, Joseph Stalin proposed a
    plan in the Soviet Union to prevent a repeat of
    drought-caused famine in 1947 that killed nearly
    a million people.
  • A wide variety of ideas were implemented during
    the next two decades.

34
  • A network of irrigation canals were built to
    divert water from two rivers into a desert
    region, to encourage the cultivation of crops
    such as rice, wheat, and cotton.
  • The rivers normally fed into the Aral Sea.

35
The Aral Sea
  • In the 1950s, the Aral sea was one of the four
    largest lakes in the world, with an area of
    26,300 square miles.
  • The entire lake was part of the U.S.S.R., in the
    countries that today are Kazakhstan and
    Uzbekistan.

36
Irrigation Canals
  • The irrigation canals were poorly built and
    uncovered, allowing about half of the water to
    evaporate or leak into the surrounding soil.
  • The Aral sea, deprived of its main water supply,
    began to shrink in 1961.

37
Aral Sea
Satellite imagery of the Aral Sea shrinkage from
1961-2011.
38
Water Use
  • Consumption Water that is withdrawn and no
    longer available for use because it has
    evaporated, been consumed by animals or plants,
    or discharged to a different location.

39
Water Use in Agriculture
  • Irrigation can be inefficient.
  • Flood or furrow irrigation
  • Half of water can be lost through evaporation.
  • Flood irrigation used to remove salts from field,
    but salt contaminates streams
  • Sprinklers have high evaporation.
  • Drip irrigation releases water near roots,
    conserving water.

40
Quantities of Water Used
  • Water use has been increasing twice as fast as
    population growth over past century.
  • Worldwide, agriculture claims about 70 of total
    water withdrawal.
  • In many developing countries, agricultural water
    use is extremely inefficient and highly
    consumptive.
  • Worldwide, industry accounts for about 25 of all
    water use.
  • Cooling water for power plants is single largest
    industrial use.

41
Water Withdrawal
42
Typical Household Water Use in U.S.
43
FRESHWATER SHORTAGES
  • Areas that consume more water than typically
    falls as precipitation are considered to have
    water stress.

44
Freshwater Shortages
  • U.N. estimates a billion people lack access to
    safe drinking water.
  • 2.6 billion lack acceptable sanitation.
  • At least 45 countries, mostly in Africa and the
    Middle East, are considered to have serious water
    stress.
  • Water shortages could lead to wars as population
    grows and climate change dries up some areas. An
    underlying cause of the Darfur genocide is water
    scarcity.

45
Freshwater Shortages
  • Privatization of public water supply in Bolivia
    sparked a revolution that overthrew the
    government in 2000.
  • Multinational corporations are moving to take
    control of water supplies in many countries.
  • Global warming may make water shortages much
    worse in many parts of the world.

46
A Precious Resource
  • Currently, 45 countries cannot meet the minimum
    essential water requirements of their citizens.
  • Will increase to 60 countries by 2050.

47
Dams and Diversions
  • Before 1900 there were 250 high dams in the
    world today there are more than 45,000.
  • In the U.S. dams are built by Army Corps of
    Engineers and Bureau of Reclamation
  • Provide cheap hydroelectric power
  • Jobs
  • Reduce flooding
  • Allow farming on lands that would otherwise be
    too dry

48
Dams and Diversions
  • On the downside, dams
  • Drown free flowing rivers
  • Submerge farmlands and towns
  • Block fish migration e.g. salmon
  • Change aquatic habitats for native species
  • Can sometimes fail, causing catastrophe
  • Johnstown flood (city just east of Pittsburgh,
    PA) killed 2,200 people when dam broke.
  • Dam failure in China killed 230,000.

49
Dams and Diversions
  • Tide of public opinion is turning
  • Army Corps of Engineers announced in 1998 that it
    would no longer be building large dams and would
    be removing some older dams to restore natural
    habitat
  • Sediment carried by rivers eventually fills up
    dams
  • Lakes behind dams lose huge amounts of water
    through evaporation and seepage
  • Downriver habitats lose nutrients and the beaches
    disappear as sediment is no longer available

50
Dams and Diversions
  • Diversion projects can dry up rivers
  • Yellow River in China is dry 226 days per year
    due to diversions
  • Colorado River in the U.S. is so depleted that
    most of the year no water reaches the mouth of
    the river in the Sea of Cortez
  • Mono Lake has been depleted to send water to Los
    Angeles. Salinity of water doubled, killing the
    brine shrimp that fed huge flocks of migratory
    birds

51
Mono Lake in California
  • Diversion of water from the lake to Los Angeles
    has shrunk the lake by 1/3, exposing these towers
    where calcium- rich springs once entered the lake.

52
Depleting Groundwater
  • Groundwater is the source of nearly 40 of fresh
    water in the U.S.
  • On a local level, withdrawing water faster than
    it can be replenished leads to a cone of
    depression in the water table.
  • Heavy pumping can deplete an aquifer.
  • Ogallala Aquifer
  • Underlies 8 states between Texas and North Dakota
  • Wells have dried up and whole towns are being
    abandoned
  • Will take thousands of years to refill

53
The Ogallala Aquifer
54
Depleting Groundwater
  • Withdrawing large amounts of groundwater in a
    small area causes porous formations to collapse,
    resulting in subsidence (settling).
  • Sinkholes form when an underground channel or
    cavern collapses. Results in permanent loss of
    aquifer.
  • Saltwater intrusion can occur along coastlines
    where overuse of freshwater reservoirs draws the
    water table low enough to allow saltwater to
    intrude.

55
Saltwater Intrusion
56
Increasing Water Supplies
  • Seeding Clouds
  • Condensation nuclei
  • Desalination - removing salt from ocean water or
    brackish water to get fresh water
  • Most common methods are distillation and reverse
    osmosis.
  • Three to four times more expensive than most
    other sources

57
Domestic Conservation
  • Estimates suggest we could save as much as half
    of domestic water usage without change in
    lifestyle
  • Largest domestic use is toilet flushing
  • Can use low volume toilets or waterless
    composting
  • Anaerobic digesters use bacteria to produce
    methane gas from waste
  • Significant amounts of water can be reclaimed and
    recycled.
  • Purified sewage effluent
  • San Diego pumps water from sewage plant directly
    into drinking reservoir

58
Price Mechanisms and Water Policy
  • Through most of U.S. history, water policies have
    generally worked against conservation.
  • In well-watered eastern states, water policy was
    based on riparian use rights.
  • In drier western regions where water is often a
    limiting resource, water law is based primarily
    on prior appropriation rights.
  • Fosters Use it or Lose it policies, where if
    you conserve you lose your rights to the water

59
Price Mechanisms and Water Policy
  • In most federal reclamation projects, customers
    were only charged for immediate costs of water
    delivery.
  • Dam and distribution system costs were
    subsidized.
  • Underpriced water in some areas amounted to a
    subsidy of 500,000 per farm per year.
  • Growing recognition that water is a precious and
    finite resource has changed policies and
    encouraged conservation across the U.S.

60
Price Mechanisms and Water Policy
  • Charging a higher proportion of real costs to
    users of public water projects has helped
    encourage conservation.
  • Conservation has been successful. U.S. today
    uses 10 less water than in 1980 but has 37
    million more people.
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