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WATER Supply Use management

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WATER. Supply Use management. Sources of water. Groundwater Aquifers wells Surface water Rivers Lakes Streams reservoirs. groundwater. Note cone of depression. Zones within a watershed. What does a healthy watershed provide?. Food for people, animals - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: WATER

WATER

Supply

Use

management

Page 2: WATER

Sources of water

• Groundwater– Aquifers– wells

• Surface water– Rivers– Lakes– Streams– reservoirs

Page 3: WATER

groundwater

Page 4: WATER
Page 5: WATER

Note cone of depression

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Page 7: WATER
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Zones within a watershed

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What does a healthy watershed provide?

• Food for people, animals• Drinking water for people animals• Habitat for animals, plants• Temporary habitat for migratory birds• Cleaning air of some contaminants• Cleaning water of contaminants• Transportation• Recreation

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What are the major uses of water in the U.S.?

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Worldwide water use

70%

20%

10%

Agriculture

Industry

Residential/municipal

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Thermoelectric

• Burning fossil fuels to make electricity.

• Boils water to turn generator

• Uses lots of water to condense the boiled water

• Much water lost to evaporation (consumptive)

• Still, much of the use is non-consumptive– Water used in the plant is

returned downstream

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Irrigation

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Main impacts of irrigation

• Waterlogging of soil

• Salinization

• Overdraft of groundwater– Main source of drinking water for ½ the US– If withdrawal > replenishment mining

• Irrigation is mainly consumptive—water evaporates or transpirates and doesn’t return to source

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Ogallala aquifer

• HUGE: water-bearing sands, gravels under about 400,000 km2 from SD to TX

• Use in some places is 20 times greater than rate of replenishment

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Why are dams built?

• Usually, many advantages cited. WHY?– Appeal to as many constituents as possible

• Diversion of water for irrigation

• Flood control

• Recreation

• Stable water supply– e.g. desert cities like LA and Las Vegas

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Environmental impacts of dams

• Loss of land and cultural resources– Riparian habitat lost

• Sediment trapped behind dam. Why bad?– Reservoir fills up, reducing its life– Sediment would supply sand and nutrients

• River below dam is unnatural (flows irregular)

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Three gorges of the Yangtze R.flooding displaced millions of people

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Sedimentation problems with dams

• Problem that faces all dams

• Many trap nearly 100% of the sediment that washes down a river.

• As sediment accumulates, reservoir can hold less water but that was the point of the dam in the first

place—to hold water!

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sedimentation

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What happens to rivers?

• Colorado River near its source in Rocky Mt. Nat. Park.

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Upper Colorado River Basin

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Colorado river: California-Arizona border

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Colorado River delta, Mexico

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Hoover dam

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Bonneville dam - WA

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Point source vs nonpoint source

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Clean Water Act

• Addresses surface water quality

• Not directly groundwater or quantity

• Tools to reduce pollutant discharges into waterways for "the protection and propagation of fish, shellfish, and wildlife and recreation in and on the water."

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CWA

• Passed in 1970

• Point pollution was early emphasis

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CWA

• Nonpoint source pollution now the big issue

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Nonpoint source pollution