water

59
Water

Upload: edna

Post on 19-Mar-2016

41 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Water. Water Distribution. Water use in the US in 2000. The Water Cycle. Transpiration (plants). Parts of a River. Collection. Transportation. Dispersal. Dendritic. Dendritic Pic - Yemen. Dendritic pattern Yemen. Radial. Rectangular. Limestone Bedrock: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Water

Water

Page 2: Water

Water Distribution

Page 3: Water

Water use in the US in 2000

Page 4: Water

The Water Cycle

Transpiration (plants)

Page 5: Water

Parts of a RiverCollection Transportation Dispersal

Page 6: Water
Page 7: Water

Dendritic patternYemen

Page 8: Water
Page 9: Water

Limestone Bedrock:Naturally fractures into squares & rectangles

Page 10: Water

Common in the Appalachians where rivershave cut through parallel ridgelines.

Page 11: Water

Drainage Basin

Page 12: Water

Drainage Basin II

Page 13: Water
Page 14: Water

Delta Development

Distributary

Water coming down a river hits the ocean; gradient goes to zeroSediment is deposited; channel eventually fillsRiver jump its banks and takes a new courseProcess repeatsVery common in deltas

Page 15: Water
Page 16: Water

Distributaries

Mississippi River Delta

Page 17: Water

Mature Deltas

Page 18: Water

Mississippi Delta

Left to its own devices, theMississippi would now beflowing down the Atchafalaya Basin.

Oil refineries line the Mississippi

Page 19: Water

Atchafalaya River

Embankment

Mississippi

Page 20: Water

New Orleans

Page 21: Water

Hurricane Threat -- very real

Page 22: Water

Eroding defenses

Page 23: Water

Rivers are complex systems influenced by number of things, which are: - discharge - velocity - gradient - sediment load - base level

River Dynamics

Page 24: Water

Stream Discharge- amount of water passing by a given point during a specific time interval

- measured in cubic meters/second

Page 25: Water

Discharge Station

Page 26: Water

Velocity

Page 27: Water

Meanders

Page 28: Water

Cut Bank

Page 29: Water

Meandering

Page 30: Water

Oxbow Lakes

Page 31: Water
Page 32: Water

NE/SD border

Page 33: Water

Slope

Page 34: Water

Sediment Load

- fine particles are moved in suspension, never touching the ground (suspended load) - silt & clay giving the water a muddy look

- coarse particles are moved by traction along the stream bed, jumping along (bed load) - move by saltation: short leaps as a strong current picks them up and moves them a short distance. - 7-10% of the total sediment load, on average. - abrasion between particles causing them to wear, smoothing them and forming round pebbles and stones. - also wears away the stream channel along the sides and bottom of the channel.

- dissolved materials are carried along in solution (dissolved load) - invisible chemical ions

Page 35: Water

QuickTime™ and aSorenson Video decompressorare needed to see this picture.

Page 36: Water

Mississippi Sediment

Page 37: Water

Base Level

The lowest elevation (depth) to which a river can erode its bed.

Page 38: Water
Page 39: Water

Stream Maturity

Youthful

Mature

Old Age

Page 40: Water

Old Age River

Page 41: Water

Flooded River

Levees occur when active deposition takes place along the banks of an older river when it is in a flood. Each time this happens the banks get higher forming a natural levee -- a barrier to future flooding.

Page 42: Water

Natural Levee

River channel

Levees

Page 43: Water

Urban Runoff

More pavement = dramatically increased runoff rates

Page 44: Water

LeveeIf the river doesn’t flood, sediment is deposited on the river bed;causes water level to rise

Page 45: Water

Concrete PavingSmooth bottom = less friction = fast-moving water = less sediment deposition

Page 46: Water

Levee Breech

Page 47: Water

Siltation

Page 48: Water

Wastewater15,000,000 people. All pavement. 50 inches of precipitation per year. Where does all the water go?

Page 49: Water

Urban sewer system

Many urban sewer systems are outdated

Page 50: Water

Wilmington, Delaware

Wilmington

Page 51: Water

Delaware Streams

Page 52: Water

Storm Sewer Runoff

Page 53: Water

Storm Sewer Runoff

Raw untreatedsewage

Page 54: Water

“IOWA'S BEACHES WILL STAY OPEN THIS YEAR.EVEN IF THEY *ARE* POLLUTED WITH FECAL BACTERIA.THE IOWA DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES SAYS THE BEACHES AT STATE PARKS ARE TOO POPULAR AND VALUABLE TO IOWANS TO CLOSE THEM WHEN THERE ISN'T CLEAR EVIDENCE OF A HEALTH RISK.LAST YEAR, EMERSON BAY IN LAKE OKOBOJI WAS ONE OF SEVERAL BEACHES CLOSED.THE D-N-R SAYS THIS YEAR THE STATE WILL POST WARNING SIGNS INSTEAD.WORKERS WILL BASE THEIR FINDINGS ONLY ON TESTS FOR FECAL COLIFORM BACTERIA.LAST YEAR, THE STATE CONSIDERED THREE DIFFERENT BACTERIAS.THE D-N-R SAYS IT CONSULTED HEALTH OFFICIALS BEFORE DECIDING THAT USING THREE WAS CONFUSING AND CUMBERSOME.”

KMEG News: Storm Lake, IA

Page 55: Water

Alesund, Norway

Page 56: Water

Wastewater Treatment

Page 57: Water

Toxic Runoff

Page 58: Water

Acid DrainageSummitville, CO:All aquatic life absent for17 miles away from mine.

Page 59: Water

How bad is it?