Hydrogeology Lab 
Last Modified: 08/20/09 
Aquifer: A rock body that has the capacity to transmit
"usable" quantities of water to a well. 
3 Rock Types that are good aquifers: 
    - Sandstone 
- Conglomerate 
- Fractured Limestone 
Aquitard: A rock body that DOES NOT transmit
"usable" quantities of water over a reasonably short
period of time. (Ex. SHALE) 
Yes, these definitions are relative--what may be considered an
aquifer to one may not me considered one by someone else. A
farmer who has a well that provides 25 gallons of water a day may
consider that to be a good aquifer--it meets his needs. However,
the farmer trying to irrigate his 300 acre farm would consider it
to be an aquitard--it doesn't meet his needs. 
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Porosity: Void spaces in the rock body 
    - Primary Porosity: original porosity in the rocks (i.e.,
        initial empty space between/within the particles that
        make up the rock) 
- Secondary Porosity: porosity in a rock derived from
        external processes (i.e., fracturing, dissolution, etc.) 
Permeability: How well interconnected the pores are
(how well the rock can transmit fluids) 
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They are also called CLASTIC AQUIFERS (Sandstones,
Conglomerates) 
    - Have a natural high porosity/permeability 
- DIFFUSE FLOW (water flows slowly through large numbers of
        thin, sinuous channels) 
- Provides a good natural filter of contaminants 
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    - Limestones don't naturally have a high
        porosity/permeability 
- Interconnected, solution enlarged fractures allow water
        to flow through quickly (relative to the alluvial
        aquifers) and in large quantities along discrete paths
        (DISCRETE FLOW) 
- Practically no filtering of contaminants 
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Recharge: The process of surface water entering the
aquifer 
    - Infiltration: rain or surface water soaks into the
        ground over a large area--recharging an ALLUVIAL AQUIFER 
- Focused: recharge to KARST aquifers along narrow
        zones of interconnected fractures that are exposed at the
        earth's surface 
Discharge: The process by which groundwater exits an
aquifer and enters a body of surface water (such as lakes,
rivers, etc.) 
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Impervious cover: includes material such as concrete
that restricts the infiltration of water into the aquifer 
Three Main Problems: 
    - It causes pollutants to concentrate on top of the cover
        rather than allowing them to seep slowly into the
        subsurface and become diluted. 
- It increases the rate at which rain runs off the
        surface-- allowing little time for pollutants to degrade
        before they enter surface water bodies; it also worsens
        floods 
- It inhibits recharge to the aquifer (by diverting water
        out of the recharge zone). 
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1) Tertiary Ogallala Aquifer 
    - an alluvial aquifer 
- is in a semi-arid region--low recharge of aquifer 
- overpumping is causing a net decline in water levels of
        the aquifer 
2) Cretaceous Edwards Aquifer 
    - a karst aquifer 
- very vulnerable to contamination 
- water flows through quickly, allowing for little dilution
        or degradation of the contaminants 
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