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Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory
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Page 1: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow(Flow in the Natural Environment)

A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial

© John F. HermanceMarch 21, 2003

Go to main directory

Page 2: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

(Information for the Presenter)

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The following “traffic light” signals appear in lower right corner of the slide to prompt presenter accordingly.

Move forward quickly, probably the next slide has the essential information (e.g. labels).

Move forward after a slight pause to assess whether content deserves brief comment.

Move forward after a longer pause, perhaps a few brief comments are required.

Conventions for Prompting Slide Changes.

This is a pausing point at which motivating comments can be made, or the contents thoroughly discussed.

Page 3: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

Directory:Directory:

A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial

© John F. HermanceMarch 21, 2003

Under Development

Page 4: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

Types of Aquifers:Confined versus Unconfined

A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial

© John F. HermanceMarch 21, 2003

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Page 5: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

Definition of a confined aquifer: A horizontal permeable zone with impermeable zones above and below. By definition the fluid in a confined aquifer is at higher-than-atmospheric pressure, so that its water will rise in any well or borehole penetrating it.

Page 6: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

© John F. Hermance

March 21, 2003

Our representation of a confined aquifer.

Page 7: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

Definition of an “unconfined” or a “watertable” aquifer.

An unconfined aquifer is one that is substantially unbounded above by impermeable zones. Accordingly, the surface of the saturated zone is at atmospheric pressure.

Page 8: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

Our representation of an unconfined aquifer.

Page 9: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

Creating coupled unconfined and confined aquifers.

Page 10: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

Operationally defining “confined” and“unconfined” aquifers.

A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial

© John F. HermanceMarch 21, 2003

Go to main directory

Page 11: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

First, operationally define a “confined” aquifer.

A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial

© John F. HermanceMarch 21, 2003

Go to main directory

Page 12: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

© John F. Hermance

March 21, 2003

We operationally define a confined aquiferby drilling.

Page 13: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

Defining a confined aquifer “operationally”.

© John F. HermanceMarch 21, 2003

Page 14: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

© John F. Hermance

March 21, 2003

Page 15: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

© John F. Hermance

March 21, 2003

Page 16: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

© John F. Hermance

March 21, 2003

Page 17: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

© John F. Hermance

March 21, 2003

Water “streams”back up thewell-bore.

Page 18: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

Definitely a confined, artesian orover-pressured aquifer.

© John F. HermanceMarch 21, 2003

Page 19: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

We operationally define an unconfined aquiferby drilling.

Page 20: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.
Page 21: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.
Page 22: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.
Page 23: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.
Page 24: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

Looking closely:Unconfined (Watertable) Aquifer.

Page 25: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

Looking closely:Unconfined (Watertable) Aquifer.

Page 26: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

Looking closely:Confined (Artesian) Aquifer.

Page 27: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

Looking closely:Confined (Artesian) Aquifer.

(No water in well even though it is significantly deeper than the local piezometric surface.)

Page 28: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

Looking closely:Confined (Artesian) Aquifer.

(At some depth, the drill intercepts an aquifer andwater rises to the local piezometric surface.)

Page 29: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

Flow in a Confined (or Artesian) Aquifer(A Qualitative View)

A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial

© John F. HermanceMarch 21, 2003

Go to main directory

Page 30: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

Elements of a Confined Aquifer

Page 31: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

Definition of a confined aquifer: A horizontal permeable zone with impermeable zones above and below. By definition the fluid in a confined aquifer is at higher-than-atmospheric pressure, so that its water will rise in any well or borehole penetrating it.

Page 32: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

This confined aquifer is supplied by two sources of equal head.

Page 33: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

The hydraulic head is everywhere the same;no gradient in h no flow.

Page 34: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

Here, a difference in hydraulic head causes flow;a gradient in h causes flow (for finite K).

Page 35: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

The piezometric (or potentiometric) surface invertical section.

Page 36: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

Flow in an Unconfined (or Watertable) Aquifer(A Qualitative View)

A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial

© John F. HermanceMarch 21, 2003

Go to main directory

Page 37: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

An “unconfined” aquifer under no flow conditions.

Page 38: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

This unconfined aquifer is supplied by two sources of equal head.

Page 39: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

If the surface of the water table is level, there is no groundwater flow.

Here h1 and h2 are the same.

Page 40: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

The hydraulic head is everywhere the same;no gradient in h, no flow.

Page 41: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

An “unconfined” aquifer under flow conditions

Page 42: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

If there is a difference in the elevation of the watertable, groundwater will flow down-gradient, from higher

elevations of the watertable to lower.

Page 43: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

Quantitative Modeling of Subsurface Flow

A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial

© John F. HermanceMarch 21, 2003

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Page 44: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

What do we mean by 3D, 2D and 1D models?

A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial

© John F. HermanceMarch 21, 2003

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Page 45: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

The earth is basically 3D.

Page 46: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

But when a set of processes are dominant in some plane, we might

invoke a 2D model.

Page 47: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

In some cases, we can get insight into one or more processes using

a 1D model.

Page 48: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

Here the hydraulic head along a 1D “profile” can “map” inflow and outflow; or water sources and sinks.

Page 49: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

Water injected into the core of a 1D aquifer causes an inflation or mounding of the watertable.

Page 50: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

A fundamental relation in groundwater flow.

Page 51: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

A local representation of a volumetric groundwater source.

Page 52: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

Such volumetric water sources are an essential feature of this conservation condition.

Page 53: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

How can we simplify the simultaneous simulation of the hydraulic head in 3D [h(x,y,z)] and

q(x,y,z) = (qx(x,y,z), qy(x,y,z), qz(x,y,z)) ?

Page 54: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.
Page 55: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.
Page 56: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

The Basic Model and Boundary Conditions

Quantitative Modeling of Confined Flow

Page 57: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

The Basic Model and Boundary Conditions

Page 58: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.
Page 59: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.
Page 60: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

This is the general solution of the problem.Works in all cases meeting assumptions.

Page 61: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.
Page 62: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

Piezometric surface for confined flow.

Page 63: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.
Page 64: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

Quantitative Modeling of Unconfined Flow

Page 65: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.
Page 66: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

A Volumetric Element in Unconfined Flow

Page 67: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.
Page 68: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.
Page 69: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.
Page 70: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.
Page 71: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.
Page 72: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.
Page 73: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.
Page 74: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

This is the general solution of the problem.Works in all cases meeting assumptions.

Page 75: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

The Basic Model and Boundary Conditions

Page 76: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.
Page 77: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.
Page 78: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.
Page 79: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.
Page 80: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.
Page 81: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.
Page 82: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.
Page 83: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.
Page 84: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

Application 1: Watertable on an elongated island.

Page 85: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

Application 2: Flow relations across a topographic (& watertable) divide.

Page 86: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

The concept of “transmissivity” as ahydrogeological parameter

A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial

© John F. HermanceMarch 21, 2003

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Page 87: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

A Common Parameter in Hydrogeology:

Page 88: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

A vertical section through a hypothetical aquifer.

Page 89: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

We desire an efficient way to represent the spatialcharacteristics of the aquifer.

Page 90: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

We would like to do so in a computationallyefficient manner.

Page 91: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

It is invariably computationally efficient ($$), instead ofmodeling the geologic detail of an aquifer, to invoke the

following mathematical idealization.

Page 92: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.
Page 93: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.
Page 94: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.
Page 95: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

The conceptual consequence of this representation is that all flow is in a thin sheet lying in the horizontal plane.

Page 96: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

Using color to represent lateral variations in transmissivity

Page 97: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

As before, the conceptual consequence of this representation is that all flow is in a thin sheet lying in the horizontal plane.

Page 98: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

For the example shown here, there are interesting implications for the direction of flow. (Recall that horizontal flow is down-gradient,

with the implications shown here.)

Page 99: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

What are the implications of such a pattern for the presence of sources and sinks for the fluid?

Page 100: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

Comparing Groundwater Levels for Confinedand Unconfined Aquifers

A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial

© John F. HermanceMarch 21, 2003

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Page 101: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

Piezometric surface for confined flow.

Page 102: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

Piezometric surface for unconfined flow.

Page 103: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

Compare piezometric surfaces for unconfined andconfined flow.

Page 104: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.
Page 105: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

Alert: A consequence of these results is that the transmissivity of this unconfined aquifer - even though it has uniform properties - is constantly changing along the direction of flow, whereas the transmissivity of the confined aquifer is constant.

Alert: A consequence of these results is that the transmissivity of this unconfined aquifer - even though it has uniform properties - is constantly changing along the direction of flow, whereas the transmissivity of the confined aquifer is constant.

Page 106: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

An Example of a Transmissivity “Map”:The Palmer River Watershed

A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial

© John F. HermanceMarch 21, 2003

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Page 109: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.
Page 110: Fundamentals of Groundwater Flow (Flow in the Natural Environment) A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial © John F. Hermance March 21, 2003 Go to main directory.

End of Presentation

A Watershed Dynamics Tutorial

Return to beginning

© John F. HermanceMarch 21, 2003


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