W - 1.0 -> 1.4 Flashcards

1
Q

Systems Approach:

A
  • Storages. - where water is held
  • Processes - physical mechanisms that drive
  • Fluxes - rate of low
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2
Q

Water budgets:

A
  • Balance of flux vs storage
  • Majority of water in salt water storage and inaccessible
  • Some sources are replenished, others can’t (e.g. groundwater/ ice sheets)
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3
Q

Types of system:

A
  • Open, e.g. drainage basin
  • Closed, e.g. hydrological cycle (solid ice, water vapour, liquid flow)
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4
Q

Water budget change:

A
  • Human activity (extraction/ reservoirs/ drinking)
  • Climate change (evaporation, precipitation, melting)
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5
Q

much less freshwater than

A

saltwater in the world

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6
Q

most of the freshwater stored within

A

glaciers and ice caps, next largest proportion in permafrost - inaccessible

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7
Q

stores:

A
  • Ocean
  • Lakes
  • Clouds
  • Soil
  • Plants and animals
  • Ground
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8
Q

fluxes:

A

Evaporation from ocean, lakes and soil

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9
Q

amazon basin:

A
  • Interception of rainfall and subsequent Evapo-transpiration levels in the Amazon are extremely high owing to dense canopy cover.
  • In this way, the Amazon rainforest can be thought of as a self-perpetuating ‘semi-closed’ system.
  • As the precipitation levels are so high, there is still a large quantity that reaches the ground – either directly or via Stemflow (water runs down outside of stem).
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10
Q

amazon basin pt 2

A
  • High temperatures and moisture content have meant the shield bedrock has been subject to significant chemical weathering.
  • Soil is extremely thin, and overlies thick layers of Kaolinite clay (low permeability)
  • High levels of surface run-off / overland flow and nutrient depletion into ‘Whitewater’ Amazon River (limited infiltration)
  • Some carbonate rocks near Amazon source have allowed percolation into deep groundwater storage – flows very slowly as Rio Hamza (4km deep).
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11
Q

the amazon:

A

-Originally flowed westwards from central shield mountains into Pacific (when continents were joined).
- Subsequent tectonic activity separated continents and created Andean mountain range to block westward flow.
- Enormous lakes formed between mountains until point when Andean uplift reversed land dip and direction of flow.
- Now the largest river by discharge volume of water in the world (209,000 cumecs) and largest drainage basin.
- Represents 20% of global riverine (freshwater) discharge to the ocean.

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12
Q

if precipitation increases

A
  • Annual river runoff increases
  • Soil moisture increases
  • Evaporation increases
  • Evapotranspiration increases
  • Precipitation further increases
  • If precipitation decreases
  • Less evapo(transpiration) and further precipitation / runoff
  • Less soil moisture
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13
Q

precipitation levels

A
  • Extremely high at the equator (1,500mm +) owing primarily to convectional rainfall at the Inter-tropical convergence zone (ITCZ).
  • Green band (below) shows high levels of evaporation and transpiration at ITCZ.
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14
Q

cherrapunji

A

Wettest place in the world, almost… (record for most in a month/yr)
But: colossal inaccess to water
- Topsoil washed away
- Monsoon climate + orographic rain
- `Winter drought
- 9-26,000 mm/yr
Khasi Hills from Bangladeshi Plain
History:
- Original name Sohra: pronounced ‘Churra’ by British
- Trans: ‘land of the oranges’

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15
Q

a monsoon is

A

a sea breeze at an immense magnitude, which occurs as a result of the difference in heating between land and sea. Land is more susceptible to Change in temperature compared to sea water, and therefore this causes pressure differences when both are heated, which creates a wind flow

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16
Q

Monsoonal climates are dependent on

A

changes in the direction of prevailing wind, as this changes where the precipitation occurs, this means monsoonal climates generally consist of predictable wet and dry seasons

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17
Q

60% if the world lives in regions that are

A

affected by monsoonal climates

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18
Q

The Indian summer monsoon occurs when

A

the sun climbs higher than the northern hemisphere, heating the continent, and this creates a flow of wind travelling onshore as wind travels from high to low pressure areas

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19
Q

Sw winds created from east coast of Africa can create

A

the burst of the monsoon, from may to June, as winds are blown north until the Himalayas acts as a barrier

20
Q

Monsoon trough marks the area of heaviest rain, which is where

A

there is an elongated area of low pressure which is parallel to Himalayan foothills

21
Q

A break is

A

the sudden decrease in rainfall during a monsoonal climate

22
Q

positive water balance:

A

precipitation > evapotranspiration

23
Q

warmer, high pressure areas

A

tend to have lower amounts of rain

24
Q

circulation cells affect

A

jet streams and wind pressure in different seasons, which affects precipitation

25
Q

iceberg alley

A
  • newfoundland, Canada
  • typically spring summer
  • 2017 much higher (hundreds so 10s)
  • Typically move 17 miles/ day
  • Moved by the Labrador current - 90% of icebergs come from the Greenland coast
26
Q

water budgets:

A
  • reflect the balance of precipitation vs evapotranspiration
27
Q

Water flow

A
  • Base flow – water that’s usually available all year round (fossil water)
  • Surface flow – seasonal differences, e.g. monsoon, or cryosphere melting
28
Q

UK Water Budget: precipitation and soil moisture

A
  • Winter – precipitation higher than evapotranspiration so soil moisture surplus
  • Spring – evapotranspiration increases above precipitation and soil utilises moisture
  • Summer – soil moisture deficit as evapotranspiration continues to rise
  • Autumn – precipitation increases as evapotranspiration decreases and soil moisture is recharged.
29
Q

Why is the cryosphere a vulnerable (non-renewable) reserve?

A
  • Although ice caps make up only 1.9% of global water, they have 68.7% of freshwater.
  • Reflects climate change – loss in cryosphere means water moves to the ocean.
  • Why is fossil water a vulnerable (non-renewable) reserve?
  • Groundwater is extracted for drinking and other human activities.
  • It can be replenished, but only if water can infiltrate that far.
30
Q

Porosity =

A

total volume of pore spaces within a rock

31
Q

pervious rocks are those

A

with distinct jointing patterns and bedding planes along which water can flow like limestone

32
Q

climate:

A
  • Precipitation north of Sudan is less than 20mm per year.
  • Contrast to Ethiopian Highlands (2,300mm per year) – concentrated in summer months as ICTZ migrates north.
  • Channel flow very small for rest of the year upstream.
  • Evaporation also increases in summer (esp. in wide flat expanse of Sudd Wetlands)
33
Q

vegetation:

A
  • River Nile - provides Egypt with only vegetation (irrigated crops)
  • Vegetation density increases as you move south into wet highlands (closer to ITCZ).
  • High interception and evapo-transpiration in summer monsoon months.
34
Q

Topography/ relief

A
  • Steep topography in the Ethiopian Highlands
  • Contributes to greater surface run-off (opposite to flat lowlands)
  • Also high levels of mechanical weathering at altitude
  • Leads to erosion of dark top soil (hence ‘Blue Nile’)
35
Q

geology

A
  • Ethiopia – largely volcanic lavas (but highly pervious due to weathering)
  • Uganda - Mix of Pre-Cambrian igneous / metamorphic and younger sedimentary.
  • Sudan & Egypt – predominantly- Sandstone overlain by Quaternary sediments (extensive groundwater storage)
36
Q

soils

A
  • Blue Nile carries fertile volcanic silts during monsoon months (saturated overland flow)
  • White Nile - light coloured clay sediment - limited infiltration and sediment load.
  • Means low permeability and limited groundwater storage.
37
Q

human vulnerabilities

A
  • Egypt holds and controls most water (reliable channel flow)
  • BUT, Ethiopia currently building ‘Grand Renaissance Dam’
  • threatens water security for Egypt – 90% of Egypt’s water comes from Blue Nile summer floods!!
  • Consider high erosion rates, limited aquifers and limited winter channel flow in uplands.
38
Q

Energy there

A
  • solar energy = suns heat
  • Gravitational potential = cause rivers to flow downhill and precipitation to fall to the ground
39
Q

Relative sizes of stores and fluxes in order

A

Stores: oceans, glaciers, surface runoff (rivers, lakes, groundwater, soils), atmosphere

Flows and fluxes: transfer from one store to another, evaporation, precipitation, surface runoff

40
Q

Residence times

A

length of time water spends in the groundwater portion of the hydrologic cycle.

41
Q

Hydrological cycle

A

Inputs - precipitation
Flows = SCIPIGT
Outputs = TED

42
Q

Water budget

A

annual balance between precipitation, evapotranspiation and runoff

43
Q

River regimes

A

annual variation of discharge of a river and result from the impact of climate, geology and soils

44
Q

Hydrograph detailed timeline
- subdued vs flashy

A
  • once rainfall starts, discharge begins to rise - rising limb
  • Peak discharge is reached some time after the peak rainfall because the water takes time to move over and through the ground to reach the river
  • Time between peak rainfall and peak discharge = lag time
  • Once input begins to decrease, so does discharge - shown by falling or recessional limb
  • Eventually river discharge returns to normal, base flow.
45
Q

Drought impact on wetlands

A
  • less precipitation = less interception as veg is stressed + less infiltration and percolation.
  • Water tables will fall and evaporation will increase
  • In combination with fall in transpiration will reduce wetland activity
46
Q

Drought impact on forests

A
  • reduced interception, reduced infiltration, overlands flow + less transpiration
  • Tree mortality is on the rise and stressed out trees more susceptible to fires