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Hydrogeology C

Posted: September 6th, 2016, 1:52 pm
by SenseiSushi
Short Event Description: Students will manipulate a groundwater computer model, answer questions about groundwater concepts, and evaluate solutions, based on hydrogeological evidence, to reduce anthropogenic effects on groundwater.

What percentage of water on Earth is potable?

Re: Hydrogeology C

Posted: September 16th, 2016, 6:40 pm
by tm-scioli
2.5%

Re: Hydrogeology C

Posted: September 19th, 2016, 7:21 pm
by tm-scioli
Name 3 major aquifers in the US

Re: Hydrogeology C

Posted: September 19th, 2016, 7:47 pm
by Magikarpmaster629
tm-scioli wrote:Name 3 major aquifers in the US
Ogallala, Ozark plateau, and the Mississippi river valley aquifer Since the answers to this are rather ambiguous, I'll go ahead and ask a question:

Give a basic definition of the term 'aquifer' and explain what properties make it different than something that isn't an aquifer.

Re: Hydrogeology C

Posted: September 22nd, 2016, 7:19 pm
by tm-scioli
An aquifer is one or more geological strata that are water bearing and capable of transmitting water at an appreciable rate. An aquifer refers only to the zone where all pore spaces and interstices are saturated with water.

Re: Hydrogeology C

Posted: September 22nd, 2016, 8:11 pm
by Magikarpmaster629
tm-scioli wrote:An aquifer is one or more geological strata that are water bearing and capable of transmitting water at an appreciable rate. An aquifer refers only to the zone where all pore spaces and interstices are saturated with water.
I'd say that's mostly right. However, aquitards and aquicludes can also have pore spaces filled with water. The difference is, aquifers have high permeability which allows them to transmit water with a reasonable speed, whereas aquitards and aquicludes transfer the water slowly or not at all.

Go ahead.

Re: Hydrogeology C

Posted: September 22nd, 2016, 9:34 pm
by tm-scioli
1. LNAPl vs. DNAPL
2. what is transitivity?

Re: Hydrogeology C

Posted: October 10th, 2016, 12:52 pm
by appleshake123
tm-scioli wrote:1. LNAPl vs. DNAPL
2. what is transitivity?
1. Lnapl is light non aqueous phase liquid(Less dense than water I guess) and Dnapls is dense non aqueous phase liquid(denser than water) 2. Do you mean transmitivity- the water flow rate in an aquifer? If not, guess I have to learn more.

Re: Hydrogeology C

Posted: October 10th, 2016, 8:47 pm
by tm-scioli
Yeah, 2 is my bad. The correct spelling is transmissivity, and it's specifically the horizontal flow rate of water of the entire thickness of the aquifer (it's usually measured as hydraulic conductivity times thickness Your turn

Re: Hydrogeology C

Posted: November 11th, 2016, 7:10 am
by choiireneus
I ran into a question regarding the time of a contaminant reaching other wells. The question was: Approximately how long will it take for the BTEX to travel from the source (well E) to the nearest well in danger of being contaminated? The answer was: 2-4 years. How am I supposed to solve this? Any expertise would be greatly appreciated! :D