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Hydrology and Water Resources of India
India is endowed with varied topographical features, such as high
mountains, extensive plateaus, and wide plains traversed by mighty
rivers. Water is an ...
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What is hydrology and what do hydrologists do?
Water is one of our most natural resources. Without it, there
would be no life on earth. Hydrology has evolved as a science in
response to the need to understand the complex water system of
the earth and help solve water problems. This hydrology primer
gives you information about water on Earth and humans'
involvement and use of water.
Play the sound file. Listen up! Hear a sound file describing
what a hydrologist does.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Water and People
What is Hydrology?
What Hydrologists Do?
Surface Water
Ground Water
Careers in Hydrology
Introduction
Hydrology is the study of water
Water is one of our most important natural resources. Without
it, there would be no life on earth. The supply of water
available for our use is limited by nature. Although there is
plenty of water on earth, it is not always in the right place,
at the right time and of the right quality. Adding to the
problem is the increasing evidence that chemical wastes
improperly discarded yesterday are showing up in our water
supplies today. Hydrology has evolved as a science in response
to the need to understand the complex water systems of the Earth
and help solve water problems. Hydrologists play a vital role in
finding solutions to water problems, and interesting and
challenging careers are available to those who choose to study
hydrology.
Water and People
Estimates of water use in the United States indicate that about
408 billion gallons per day (one thousand million gallons per
day, abbreviated Bgal/d) were withdrawn for all uses during
2000. This total has varied less than 3 percent since 1985 as
withdrawals have stabilized for the two largest
uses—thermoelectric power and irrigation. Fresh ground-water
withdrawals (83.3 Bgal/d) during 2000 were 14 percent more than
during 1985. Fresh surface-water withdrawals for 2000 were 262
Bgal/d, varying less than 2 percent since 1985.
Much of our water use is hidden. Think about what you had for
lunch. A hamburger, for example, requires water to raise wheat
for the bun, to grow hay and corn to feed the cattle and to
process the bread and beef. Together with french fries and a
soft drink, this all-American meal uses about 1,500 gallons of
water--enough to fill a small swimming pool. How about your
clothes? To grow cotton for a pair of jeans takes about 400
gallons. A shirt requires about 400 gallons. How do you get to
school or to the store? To produce the amount of finished steel
in a car has in the past required about 32,000 gallons of water.
Similarly, the steel in a 30-pound bicycle required 480 gallons.
This shows that industry must continue to strive to reduce water
use through manufacturing processes that use less water, and
through recycling of water.
What is Hydrology?
Hydrology is the science that encompasses the occurrence,
distribution, movement and properties of the waters of the earth
and their relationship with the environment within each phase of
the hydrologic cycle. The water cycle, or hydrologic cycle, is a
continuous process by which water is purified by evaporation and
transported from the earth's surface (including the oceans) to
the atmosphere and back to the land and oceans. All of the
physical, chemical and biological processes involving water as
it travels its various paths in the atmosphere, over and beneath
the earth's surface and through growing plants, are of interest
to those who study the hydrologic cycle. There are many pathways
the water may take in its continuous cycle of falling as
rainfall or snowfall and returning to the atmosphere. It may be
captured for millions of years in polar ice caps. It may flow to
rivers and finally to the sea. It may soak into the soil to be
evaporated directly from the soil surface as it dries or be
transpired by growing plants. It may percolate through the soil
to ground water reservoirs (aquifers) to be stored or it may
flow to wells or springs or back to streams by seepage. They
cycle for water may be short, or it may take millions of years.
People tap the water cycle for their own uses. Water is diverted
temporarily from one part of the cycle by pumping it from the
ground or drawing it from a river or lake. It is used for a
variety of activities such as households, businesses and
industries; for irrigation of farms and parklands; and for
production of electric power. After use, water is returned to
another part of the cycle: perhaps discharged downstream or
allowed to soak into the ground. Used water normally is lower in
quality, even after treatment, which often poses a problem for
downstream users. The hydrologist studies the fundamental
transport processes to be able to describe the quantity and
quality of water as it moves through the cycle (evaporation,
precipitation, streamflow, infiltration, ground water flow, and
other components). The engineering hydrologist, or water
resources engineer, is involved in the planning, analysis,
design, construction and operation of projects for the control,
utilization, and management of water resources. Water resources
problems are also the concern of meteorologists, oceanographers,
geologists, chemists, physicists, biologists, economists,
political scientists, specialists in applied mathematics and
computer science, and engineers in several fields.
What Hydrologists Do?
Hydrologists apply scientific knowledge and mathematical
principles to solve water-related problems in society: problems
of quantity, quality and availability. They may be concerned
with finding water supplies for cities or irrigated farms, or
controlling river flooding or soil erosion. Or, they may work in
environmental protection: preventing or cleaning up pollution or
locating sites for safe disposal of hazardous wastes. Persons
trained in hydrology may have a wide variety of job titles.
Scientists and engineers in hydrology may be involved in both
field investigations and office work. In the field, they may
collect basic data, oversee testing of water quality, direct
field crews and work with equipment. Many jobs require travel,
some abroad. A hydrologist may spend considerable time doing
field work in remote and rugged terrain. In the office,
hydrologists do many things such as interpreting hydrologic data
and performing analyses for determining possible water supplies.
Much of their work relies on computers for organizing,
summarizing and analyzing masses of data, and for modeling
studies such as the prediction of flooding and the consequences
of reservoir releases or the effect of leaking underground oil
storage tanks. The work of hydrologists is as varied as the uses
of water and may range from planning multimillion dollar
interstate water projects to advising homeowners about backyard
drainage problems.
Surface Water
Most cities meet their needs for water by withdrawing it from
the nearest river, lake or reservoir. Hydrologists help cities
by collecting and analyzing the data needed to predict how much
water is available from local supplies and whether it will be
sufficient to meet the city's projected future needs. To do
this, hydrologists study records of rainfall, snowpack depths
and river flows that are collected and compiled by hydrologists
in various government agencies. They inventory the extent river
flow already is being used by others.
Managing reservoirs can be quite complex, because they generally
serve many purposes. Reservoirs increase the reliability of
local water supplies. Hydrologists use topographic maps and
aerial photographs to determine where the reservoir shorelines
will be and to calculate reservoir depths and storage capacity.
This work ensures that, even at maximum capacity, no highways,
railroads or homes would be flooded.
Deciding how much water to release and how much to store depends
upon the time of year, flow predictions for the next several
months, and the needs of irrigators and cities as well as
downstream water-users that rely on the reservoir. If the
reservoir also is used for recreation or for generation of
hydroelectric power, those requirements must be considered.
Decisions must be coordinated with other reservoir managers
along the river. Hydrologists collect the necessary information,
enter it into a computer, and run computer models to predict the
results under various operating strategies. On the basis of
these studies, reservoir managers can make the best decision for
those involved.
The availability of surface water for swimming, drinking,
industrial or other uses sometimes is restricted because of
pollution. Pollution can be merely an unsightly and inconvenient
nuisance, or it can be an invisible, but deadly, threat to the
health of people, plants and animals.
Hydrologists assist public health officials in monitoring public
water supplies to ensure that health standards are met. When
pollution is discovered, environmental engineers work with
hydrologists in devising the necessary sampling program. Water
quality in estuaries, streams, rivers and lakes must be
monitored, and the health of fish, plants and wildlife along
their stretches surveyed. Related work concerns acid rain and
its effects on aquatic life, and the behavior of toxic metals
and organic chemicals in aquatic environments. Hydrologic and
water quality mathematical models are developed and used by
hydrologists for planning and management and predicting water
quality effects of changed conditions. Simple analyses such as
pH, turbidity, and oxygen content may be done by hydrologists in
the field. Other chemical analyses require more sophisticated
laboratory equipment. In the past, municipal and industrial
sewage was a major source of pollution for streams and lakes.
Such wastes often received only minimal treatment, or raw wastes
were dumped into rivers. Today, we are more aware of the
consequences of such actions, and billions of dollars must be
invested in pollution-control equipment to protect the waters of
the earth. Other sources of pollution are more difficult to
identify and control. These include road deicing salts, storm
runoff from urban areas and farmland, and erosion from
construction sites.
Groundwater
Groundwater, pumped from beneath the earth's surface, is often
cheaper, more convenient and less vulnerable to pollution than
surface water. Therefore, it is commonly used for public water
supplies. Groundwater provides the largest source of usable
water storage in the United States. Underground reservoirs
contain far more water than the capacity of all surface
reservoirs and lakes, including the Great Lakes. In some areas,
ground water may be the only option. Some municipalities survive
solely on groundwater.
Hydrologists estimate the volume of water stored underground by
measuring water levels in local wells and by examining geologic
records from well-drilling to determine the extent, depth and
thickness of water-bearing sediments and rocks. Before an
investment is made in full-sized wells, hydrologists may
supervise the drilling of test wells. They note the depths at
which water is encountered and collect samples of soils, rock
and water for laboratory analyses. They may run a variety of
geophysical tests on the completed hole, keeping and accurate
log of their observations and test results. Hydrologists
determine the most efficient pumping rate by monitoring the
extent that water levels drop in the pumped well and in its
nearest neighbors. Pumping the well too fast could cause it to
go dry or could interfere with neighboring wells. Along the
coast, overpumping can cause saltwater intrusion. By plotting
and analyzing these data, hydrologists can estimate the maximum
and optimum yields of the well.
Polluted ground water is less visible, but more insidious and
difficult to clean up, than pollution in rivers and lakes.
Ground water pollution most often results from improper disposal
of wastes on land. Major sources include industrial and
household chemicals and garbage landfills, industrial waste
lagoons, tailings and process wastewater from mines, oil field
brine pits, leaking underground oil storage tanks and pipelines,
sewage sludge and septic systems. Hydrologists provide guidance
in the location of monitoring wells around waste disposal sites
and sample them at regular intervals to determine if undesirable
leachate--contaminated water containing toxic or hazardous
chemicals--is reaching the ground water. In polluted areas,
hydrologists may collect soil and water samples to identify the
type and extent of contamination. The chemical data then are
plotted on a map to show the size and direction of waste
movement. In complex situations, computer modeling of water flow
and waste migration provides guidance for a clean-up program. In
extreme cases, remedial actions may require excavation of the
polluted soil. Today, most people and industries realize that
the amount of money invested in prevention is far less than that
of cleanup. Hydrologists often are consulted for selection of
proper sites for new waste disposal facilities. The danger of
pollution is minimized by locating wells in areas of deep ground
water and impermeable soils. Other practices include lining the
bottom of a landfill with watertight materials, collecting any
leachate with drains, and keeping the landfill surface covered
as much as possible. Careful monitoring is always necessary.
Careers in Hydrology
Students who plan to become hydrologists need a strong emphasis
in mathematics, statistics, geology, physics, computer science,
chemistry and biology. In addition, sufficient background in
other subjects--economics, public finance, environmental law,
government policy--is needed to communicate with experts in
these fields and to understand the implications of their work on
hydrology. Communicating clearly in writing and speech is a
basic requirement essential for any professional person.
Hydrologists should be able to work well with people, not only
as part of a team with other scientists and engineers, but also
in public relations, whether it be advising governmental leaders
or informing the general public on water issues. Hydrology
offers a variety of interesting and challenging career choices
for today and tomorrow. It's a field worth considering.
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