Unconfined aquifer
recharge area
Confined
aquifer
recharge area
Unconfined
aquifer
Water
table
Water
table
well
Confined
aquifer Artesian
well
Precipitation
Runoff
Stream
Lake
Infiltration
Impermeable
rock or clay
246 CHAPTER 10 Freshwater Resources and Water Pollution
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Excess surface water seeps downward through soil and porous rock layers until it reaches
impermeable rock or clay. An unconfined aquifer holds groundwater recharged by surface
water directly above it. A confined aquifer stores groundwater between impermeable layers.
- Relate some of the problems caused by
aquifer depletion, overdrawing of surface
waters, and salinization of irrigated soil. - Contrast the water problems associated with
the Ogallala Aquifer and the Colorado River
Basin. - Describe the role of international cooperation
in managing shared water resources.
Water Resource Problems
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
W
ater resource problems fall into three catego-
ries: too much water, too little water, and poor-
quality water. Flooding occurs when a river’s
discharge cannot be contained within its nor-
mal channel. Today’s floods are more disastrous in terms of
property loss than those of the past because humans often
remove water-absorbing plant cover from the soil and con-
struct buildings on floodplains. (A floodplain is the area
and groundwater are interrelated parts of the hydro-
logic cycle. Aquifers are underground reservoirs in
which groundwater is stored (}ÕÀiÊ£ä°{).
Most groundwater is considered a nonrenewable
resource because it has taken hundreds or even thousands
of years to accumulate, and usually only a small portion of
it is replaced each year by seepage of surface water.
- How do hydrogen bonds form between
adjacent water molecules? - What are two unique properties of water?
- How do processes in the hydrologic cycle affect
the accumulation of groundwater?