Reviewer With Solutions
Reviewer With Solutions
Reviewer With Solutions
Precipitation Aquifer
Well Hydraulics
CO1 TOPICS
A. HYDROLOGIC CYCLE
Introduction
● Hydrology “Hudor” - water, “Logy” - study of
● Study of water and its properties, distribution, and effects on the Earth’s surface, soil,
and atmosphere.
● The total amount of water on the earth and its atmosphere does not change, but the
earth’s water is always moving.
● The process of circulation and conservation of earth’s water as it circulates from the land
to the sky and back again is called the “Hydrologic Cycle”.
Terminologies
Evaporation - is water extracted from the soil by the plant roots and evaporates
from within plant leaves is transpiration.
- Solar radiation, air tenperature, vapor pressure, wind, and
atmospheric pressure effect the amount of natural evaporation t
hat akes place in any geographic area
Percolation - Movement of water through the soil, and its layers by gravity and
capillary forces.
- The prime moving force of ground water is gravity
● Water is neither lost nor gained from ● Solar energy provides the energy that
Earth over time. drives and sustains the cycling of
● The quantities of water in the water on earth
atmosphere, soils, groundwater, ● There is no beginning or end to the
surface water, glaciers, and other cycle
components are constantly changing ● The water supply on earth is constant,
because of the dynamic nature of the but the allocation of water in storage
hydrologic cycle. in circulation can vary with time.
Type III - No very pronounced maximum rain A dry month has less than
period, with a short dry season lasting 50mm of rainfall, but having
1-3 months (December to February) more than 100mm of rainfall
(March to May) after three or more parched
- Resembles Type 1 for its short dry months is also considered a
season dry month.
D. PRECIPITATION
PRECIPITATION
CO2 TOPICS
If the average annual precipitation at each of If the difference between the average annual
the three adjacent stations differs from the precipitation at any of the adjacent stations
average at the missing data station LESS and the missing data station is GREATER
THAN 10% THAN 10%
Infiltration Groundwater
- Is the process by which water on the - Gravity and pressure move water
ground surface enters the soil. downward and sideways underground
Percolation through spaces between rocks
- Is the downward movement of water - It then emerges back to land surfaces
through the soil itself such as rivers and oceans, to keep
the water cycle going.
- The various characteristics of aquifers
and confining layers of subsurface
rocks in the ground determine the
direction and speed of groundwater
movement.
What is difference between the Infiltration - Water moving below ground depends
and Percolation? on the permeability and porosity of the
- Infiltration occurs in the topmost zone subsurface rock
of soil; percolation occurs when water - The amount of water that an aquifer
passes through soil and rock may yield depends upon the porosity
- Driving forces of percolation: gravity and permeability of the material in the
and capillary forces earth layer.
- The initial surface entry of water is Permeability
called Infiltration. - How easy or difficult it is for water to
move.
Porosity
- The amount of open space in the
material
- Usually expressed as a fraction of the
volume of void space divided by the
total volume and written as a
percentage between 0-100%
- Groundwater flows through the open
pores in sediment and rock
- Layers with high permeability allow
water to move more freely between
pore spaces
- Gravel layers have high permeability,
thus making them better groundwater
sources compared to clay
- Bedrock layers can make acceptable
groundwater sources due to cracks
that allow water to flow and supply
water to a well.
AQUIFER
Aquifer
- A well that doesn't require a pump to 1. Aquitard - zone within the earth that
bring water to the surface; occurs restricts groundwater flow from one
when there is enough pressure in the aquifer to another.
aquifer - Is any geological formation of
- Pressure forces the water to the a rather semipervious nature
surface without any sort of assistance that transmits water at slower
rates than an aquifer
- Freeze and Cherry (1979)
describe an aquitard as the
less-permeable beds in a
stratigraphic sequence
2. Aquiclude or Aquifuge - completely
impermeable aquitard.
- Is a geological formation which
is impermeable to the flow of
water
- Large amount of water in it but
does not permit water through
it and also does not yield water
- Has high porosity
- Clay is an example of
aquiclude
WELL HYDRAULICS
POTENTIOMETRIC SURFACE
● It is the level at which groundwater will rise in a well.
● The potentiometric surface will be the same level as the water table in an
unconfined aquifer.
● In a confined aquifer, the potentiometric surface will be higher than the water
level since the water is under pressure.
● The water level in the well will also be higher.
● Pumping wells create a CONE OF DEPRESSION in the water table
CO3 TOPICS
SURFACE WATER
Surface Water
Definition: Facts:
- Any body of water above ground, - Majority of surface water is produced
including streams, rivers, lakes, by PRECIPITATION
wetlands, reservoirs, and creeks. - Level of surface water LESSEN due
- It is located on top of the land, forming to EVAPORATION, as well as water
terrestrial waterbodies also referred to moving into the ground becoming
as BLUE WATER groundwater.
- Used for drinking water.
- Used for irrigation, wastewater
treatment, livestock industrial uses,
hydropower, and recreation.
Watershed
Philippine Watersheds
TOP9
● Doña Remedios-General Tinio
● Area: 20 760 hectares
● Bulacan- Nueva Ecija
● Date of Proclamation: 1988
TOP8
● Aklan river
● Area: 23 315 hectares
● Aklan
● Date of Proclamation: 1990
TOP7
● Catanduanes watershed
● Area: 26010 hectares
● Catanduanes
● Date of Proclamation: 1987
TOP6
● Talavera watershed
● Area: 37156 hectares
● Nueva Ecija- Nueva vizcaya
● Date of Proclamation: 1938
TOP5
● Lower agno
● Area: 39304 hectares
● Benguet
● Date of Proclamation: 1983
TOP4
● Libungan
● Area: 52820 hectares
● Cotabato
● Date of Proclamation: 1990
TOP3
● Pantabangan-Carranglan
● Area: 84500 hectares
● Nueva ecija
● Date of Proclamation: 1969
TOP2
● Allah watershed
● Area: 92450 hectares
● South cotabato
● Date of Proclamation: 1985
TOP1
● Lake Lanao
● Area: 180460 hectares
● Lanao del sur
● Date of Proclamation: 1992
STREAMFLOW
Streamflow
Definition: Characteristics:
- Also known as DISCHARGE, is the - The flow of the stream is directly
volume of water that moves over a related to the amount of water moving
designated point over a fixed period of off the watershed into the stream
time. channel
- It is often expressed as cubic feet per - It is affected by weather, increasing
second (ft3/sec) during rainstorms and decreasing
- It is always changing, from day to day during dry periods.
and even minute to minute. - FLOW is a function of water volume
- Its main influence is precipitation and velocity. It is important because of
runoff in the watershed. its impact on water quality and on the
Remember: living organisms and habitats in the
- rainfall causes rivers to rise, and a stream.
river can even rise if it only rains very
far up in the watershed.
- Water that falls in a watershed will
eventually drain by the outflow point.
HYDROGRAPHS
● Hydrologists study streamflow with hydrographs.
● A hydrograph is a graph of the flow in a stream over a period of time. The figure shown
is a hydrograph, with stream flow (discharge) on the y-axis and time on the x-axis.
● Peaks in the hydrograph are usually a result of precipitation events, while troughs
represent drier times.
STREAM ORDER
● To obtain a more accurate hydrograph shape, a watershed can be divided into individual
streams and separate hydrographs computed for each. Then the separate hydrographs
are routed using methods that we have. Stream order is a numbering system for the
surface drainage segments which can assist in the identification of hydrographs.
● The smallest conduit or the only one for a watershed is designated order 1. When two
first-order conduits join, a conduit of order 2 is formed. Two conduits of the same order
must join to increase the order of the new conduit.
Stage-Discharge Relations
- Periodic meter measurements of flow and simultaneous stage observations provide data
for a calibration curve called a rating curve or stage-discharge relation.
- For most stations a simple plot of stage versus discharge is satisfactory. Such a curve is
approximately parabolic but may show some irregularities if the control changes within
the range of flows experienced or if the cross section is irregular.
Develop a Hyetograph for the following rainfall data. Plot the intensity (inches/hour) for
30 minute intervals
UNIT HYDROGRAPH
- A unit hydrograph shows the temporal change in flow, or discharge, per unit of runoff.
- In other words, how the flow of a stream will be affected over time by the addition of one
unit of runoff.
- The unit hydrograph is a useful tool in the process of predicting the impact of
precipitation on streamflow.
BASIN–AVERAGED RAINFALL
- In typical non–snow situations, we begin the hydrologic forecast process with rainfall. In
particular, we start with a basin–averaged rainfall.
- This simply tells us how much rain fell, or is forecast to fall, on a given basin and typically
takes the form of a rainfall depth per time.
- In unit hydrograph theory, we assume that this rainfall has fallen uniformly across the
basin.