Ge Olo Gy
Ge Olo Gy
Ge Olo Gy
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Water and water resources the hydrological cycle
More on hydrologic cycle
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Scale in Water Balances Water balance at a catchment scale
o Spatial Scale What is a catchment/drainage basin?
Watershed (smaller catchment eg. Lotsane at Palapye,
small drainage project, eg, culvert, road/ bridge crossing a A drainage basin is an area surrounded by a
stream continuous topographic divide within which all runoff
Catchment (intermediate basin eg. Motloutse) joins a single stream and extends downstream to the
Basin Scale (Main drainage basin, eg. Limpopo) point that the stream crosses the divide
o Temporal Scale Usefulness of concept of a catchment
o Seconds, minutes, hours, days, (storms, floods) to understand water balances
o Months, seasons, (water avaiability, storage) to understand processes
o Annual, decadal, century (climate variability, climate change,
land use change effects) Example: inflows, outflows and storage processes
1155 m
1150 m
-20.75 S
A basin, drainage or 1145 m
1140 m
catchment area that is 1135 m
1130 m
the land area that 1125 m
1120 m
-20.8 S
contributes runoff to 1115 m
1110 m
1105 m
an outlet point 1100 m
1095 m
1090 m
-20.85 S 1085 m
1080 m
Watershed 1075 m
Outlet point
boundary 1070 m
1065 m
1060 m
-20.9 S 1055 m
1050 m
27.05 E 27.1 E 27.15 E 27.2 E 27.25 E 27.3 E
Derived from remote sensing radar data Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) digital terrain model
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Hydrological model as a system
Water balance at a catchment
Water balance
Consider Gaborone dam
1. Hydrologic budget above the surface
P + R1 R2 + Rg - Es - Ts - I = Ss (1.1)
2. Hydrologic budget below the surface Storage/Water balance components:
I + G1 G2 - Rg - Eg - Tg = Sg (1.2) Inflow from Notwane river
3. Hydrologic budget for the region (Add Eq. 1.2 and 1.3) Downstream release
P - (R2 R1) - (Es + Eg) - (Ts + Tg) - (G2 G1) = (Ss + Sg) (1.3)
Water supply
hydrologic budget for a region can be written simply as ET
P R G E T= S (1.4) Lake Evaporation
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Water budget ctd
Example: Say we have a streamflow depth of 15cm/yr from a 640ha watershed,
Water budget ctd what is this streamflow rate in km3/yr?
D = 15cm/yr
Example: Say we have 50cm of rain and 35cm of plant/soil loss A = 640 000 ha
in one year Q = 9 600 000 ha-cm per year = 9.6*106*ha cm* (10-2 km2 /ha) cm *(10-5km/cm)/yr =
0.96km3/yr
P = 50cm/yr
ET = 35cm/yr Conversion of Units
1 ha = 10 000m2 = 10-2 km2 1 cm= 10-2 m = 10-5 km
Q =P - ET = 50 - 35 = 15 cm/yr
You probably wonder what a ha-cm is:
We convert this depth per time (D) to a volume per time (Q) It is equal to one cm of water that covers one hectare of land
How? By multiplying by the watershed area! Can you observe what can be asked!
Q=AxD Ø Gaborone dam has what volume in ha-cm?
Hint: If you add 10cm to your bathtub, how do you get the volume of water Ø How much water does the Pandamatenga agricultural field consume in one year?
you added? Ø What is the annual water consumption for Gaborone City Residents?
The volume is the base times the height
Think of it as spreading the water out over the watershed Let s do this in class:
The depth is the height · If I have a 10-hectare golf course, and I put on 3cm of water every week, how many
The base is the watershed area m2-cm is this?
· How many m3 of water is this?
· If water bill is P2.50 per m3, what is the monthly bill to irrigate my Golf Course?
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Facilities in Water Projects
Control of excess water
Flood mitigation/Storm drainage
Bridges,
culverts
Sewerage
Conservation (Quantity)
Water supply
Irrigation
Hydropower
Navigation
Conservation (quality)
Pollution control
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