Dear students I am receiving your email. Keep sending your
query such that we can incorporate in coming lesson. This is continuation of
chapter 5: Water. After completion we will go through the question answer.
SOURCES OF WATER:
Surface water
Surface water is water in a river, lake or fresh water wetland. Surface water is naturally
replenished by precipitation and naturally lost through discharge to the oceans, evaporation, evapotranspiration and sub-surface seepage.
Although the only natural input to any surface water system is
precipitation within its watershed, the total quantity of water in that system at any
given time is also dependent on many other factors. These factors include
storage capacity in lakes, wetlands and artificial reservoirs, the permeability of the soil beneath these storage bodies, the runoff characteristics of the
land in the watershed, the timing of the precipitation and local evaporation
rates. All of these factors also affect the proportions of water loss.
Under Ground water
Under Ground water or Sub-surface water, is fresh water located in
the pore space of soil and rocks. It is also water that is flowing within aquifers below the water table. Sometimes it is useful to make a distinction
between sub-surface water that is closely associated with surface water and
deep sub-surface water in an aquifer (sometimes called "fossil
water").
Sub-surface water can be thought of in the same terms as surface
water: inputs, outputs and storage. The critical difference is that due to its
slow rate of turnover, sub-surface water storage is generally much larger
compared to inputs than it is for surface water. This difference makes it easy
for humans to use sub-surface water unsustainably for a long time without
severe consequences. Nevertheless, over the long term the average rate of
seepage above a sub-surface water source is the upper bound for average
consumption of water from that source.
Key point: Deep ground water is normally safe for drinking.
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