html5-img
1 / 41

Hydrologic cycle

Hydrologic cycle. Free water distribution (not hydrated minerals) 97% in oceans 2% in ice Melting would raise sealevel by 2% (about 80 m) Greenland alone would raise sealevel ~7 m 1% in ground water 0.01% in streams and lakes 0.001% in atmosphere. Some terminology.

damita
Download Presentation

Hydrologic cycle

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Hydrologic cycle • Free water distribution (not hydrated minerals) • 97% in oceans • 2% in ice • Melting would raise sealevel by 2% (about 80 m) • Greenland alone would raise sealevel ~7 m • 1% in ground water • 0.01% in streams and lakes • 0.001% in atmosphere

  2. Some terminology • Reservoirs = location of water (e.g. lake, ocean, river etc.) • Flux = motion of water between reservoirs • Units = mass per area per time • Hydrologic cycle = closed loop of the flux of water

  3. Flux = can be motion of any material (e.g. water, solutes, students coming into room) • Steady state system: • One that has invariant concentrations through time • Input = output

  4. Box model of hydrologic cycle • Three reservoir box model • Fluxes and abundances of water • Are all fluxes present between boxes?

  5. A more complicated (complete?) box model

  6. A natural system: Suwannee River What are the values water and mass for each box? Abundance in reservoir What are values for arrows? Fluxes

  7. IPCC Global Carbon Cycle Perturbation Perturbation • Black – fluxes and reservoirs - pre 1750 • Red – Anthropogenic induced fluxes • Includes weathering – but limited to silicate minerals Solomon et al., (eds) IPCC report 2007

  8. Residence Time • Average time that material is in reservoir • Only systems in steady state • Definition: t= A/J Where: A = abundance (not concentration) of material (units of mass) J = flux (in or out of reservoir) of material (units of mass/time)

  9. Example: • What is t of students if 6 students/hr enter room with 6 students? • t = 6 students/6 students/hr = 1 hour

  10. Transient conditions • System not in steady state called transient • Best defined by “Response time” • The amount of time for mass to change to certain value • Typically doubling or halving. • Sometimes considered “e-folding time” • Amount of time for exponentially growing quantity to increase by a factor of e. • Exponential decay = time to decrease by a factor of 1/e

  11. Water chemistry and the hydrologic cycle • So far just considered water as a cycle • Water not pure – so could also consider elemental cycling within the water cycle • E.g. C transport largely hydrologic (atmosphere well mixed) • Reservoirs are solid, liquid and gas

  12. Water chemistry and the hydrologic cycle • Rain • Starting point – what controls composition? • Streams & Groundwater • Water/rock interactions – greatest amount of alteration • Meteoric vs non-meteoric water • Oceans – constant salinity, constant composition for some solutes

  13. Sublimation Precipitation Recirculated seawater/MOR Fluxes in hydrologic cycle – this figure is for water. How would dissolved mass be included in this?

  14. Chemical (and Isotopic) composition of water • Natural water always in contact with soluble material – air, sediments, rocks, organic matter • Consequence – no natural water is “pure”

  15. Importance • Dissolution of gases (e.g., CO2) • Dissolution of solid phases – porosity • Precipitation of solid phases – cements • Coupled with hydrologic cycle - controls flux of material • Next – short discussion of some controls on solute composition

  16. Rain water chemistry Na+ concentrations • What might be the most likely source for Na and Cl? • How could you test to see if this hypothesis is true? • What are implications if this is true, e.g. what and where are other sources? Cl- concentrations

  17. Ca Concentration Sources of Ca other than seaspray

  18. Relative concentrations, Rainfall Note – total concentrations differ between samples Pollution – H2SO4 Gypsum dust Close to ocean composition but still modified SO4 matches pH – H2SO4 SO4 matches Ca SO4 marine influence – dimethyl sulfide

  19. Fractionation factor, Fc • Determine amount of dissolved mass from oceans • Where: • C is conservative dissolved component, Cl is chloride composition of sample or seawater

  20. Temporal variations • During storm • Rain starts salty, becomes fresher during storm • O and H isotopes also change during storm • Snow melt initially saltier & lower pH • change in melting temperature

  21. Other atmospheric sources • Rainfall is not the only mechanism to deposit material from atmosphere to land surface • Aerosol – suspension of fine solid or liquid in gas (e.g. atmosphere) • Examples – smoke, haze over oceans, air pollution, smog

  22. Dry deposition – aerosols • Dissolution of gases and aerosols by vegetation and wet surfaces • Sedimentation of large aerosols by gravity • Occult deposition • More general term - Dry deposition plus deposition from fog • Dry and Occult deposition difficult to measure

  23. Atmospheric deposition of material called “Throughfall” • Sum of solutes from precipitation, occult deposition, and dry deposition • A working definition • Data Available • National Atmospheric Deposition Program • http://nadp.sws.uiuc.edu/

  24. Rain water chemistry Na+ concentrations • What might be the most likely source for Na and Cl? • How could you test to see if this hypothesis is true? • What are implications if this is true, e.g. what and where are other sources? Cl- concentrations

  25. Ca Concentration Sources of Ca other than seaspray

  26. Relative concentrations, Rainfall Note – total concentrations differ between samples Pollution – H2SO4 Gypsum dust Close to ocean composition but still modified SO4 matches pH – H2SO4 SO4 matches Ca SO4 marine influence – dimethyl sulfide

  27. Compositional changes resulting from throughfall – NE US Open box – throughfall composition Closed box – incident precipitation composition

  28. Surface and Groundwater • Atmospheric deposition leads to surface and ground water • Variety of processes alter/move this water: • Evaporation • Transpiration (vegetative induced evaporation) • Evapotranspiration

  29. Movement across/through land surface • Overland flow – heavy flow on land surface • Interflow – flow through soil zone • Percolate into ground water

  30. Conceptualization of water flow Important to consider how each of these flow paths alter chemical compositions of water Through- fall

  31. Examples of changing chemistry • Plants • Provide solutes, neutralize acidity, extract N and P species • Soil/minerals • Dissolve providing solutes • Evaporation • Increase overall solute concentrations • Elevated concentrations lead to precipitation • Salts/cements

  32. Stream Hydrology • Baseflow • ground water source to streams • Allow streams to flow even in droughts • Augmentations of baseflow • Interflow, overland flow, direct precipitation • Result in flooding • Chemical variations in time • caused by variations in compositions of sources

  33. Bank storage • Flooding causes hydraulic head of stream to be greater than hydraulic head of ground water • Baseflow direction reversed • Water flows from stream to ground water • Hyporheic flow • Exchange of water with stream bed and stagnant areas of stream • Nutrient spiraling – chemical changes in composition because changing reservoir

  34. Stream compositions • Generally little change downstream • Short residence time in stream • Little contact with solids • Changes usually biologically mediated • Nutrients (N, P, Si) uptake and release (Nutrient spiraling) • Pollutants • Chemistry changes with discharge • Chemistry changes with exchange of GW and SW

  35. Diel Stream varations • Solar radiation changes • Nutrient and DO change • SpC, pH and Ca change • All sub-aqueous plant mediated

  36. Ground water • Unconfined example • Porosity – fraction of total solid that is void • Porosity filled w/ water or water + gas • Vadose zone – zone with gas plus water (unsaturated – can be confusing term) • Phreatic zone – all water (saturated zone) • Water table – separates vadose and phreatic zone

  37. Groundwater flow • Flow through rocks controlled by permeability • Water flows from high areas to low areas • Head gradients • Water table mimics land topography • Flow rate depends on gradient and permeability

  38. Confined aquifers • Regions with (semi) impermeable rocks • Confining unit • Confined aquifers have upper boundary in contact with confining unit • Water above confining unit is perched • Level water will rise is pieziometric surface • Hydrostatic head

  39. Effects of confined aquifers Perched aquifers, springs, water table mimic topography GW withdrawal lowers head

  40. Other types of water • Meteoric water – rain, surface, ground water • Water buried with sediments in lakes and oceans • Formation waters • Pore waters • Interstitial water/fluids • Typically old – greatly altered in composition

  41. Other water sources • Dehydration of hydrated mineral phases • Clays, amphiboles, zeolites • Metamorphic water • Water from origin of earth – mantle water • Juvenile water • Both small volumetrically; important geological consequences

More Related