Practical applications

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Development and management of water resources

Water is essential to many of humankind’s most basic activities—agriculture, forestry, industry, power generation, and recreation. As the hydrologic sciences provide much of the knowledge and understanding on which the development and management of available water resources are based, they are of fundamental importance.

In 1965 the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) initiated the International Hydrological Decade (IHD), a 10-year program that provided an important impetus to international collaboration in hydrology. Considerable progress was made in hydrology during the IHD, but much still remains to be done, both in the basic understanding of hydrologic processes and in the development and conservation of available water resources. Many developing countries remain highly susceptible to diseases related to a lack of water supplies of good quality and to the effects of drought. This has been cruelly highlighted in recent times by the severe droughts in the Sahel region of Africa in the periods 1969–74 and 1982–85 (see below).

In the developed countries the ready availability of a supply of good quality water is expected. Yet, even in the most advanced countries, many water sources are not being used wisely. Groundwater levels in certain areas have fallen dramatically since the 1940s, leading to ever higher pumping costs. Other surface and subsurface water sources are becoming increasingly polluted by urban, agricultural, and industrial wastes in spite of increased expenditure on waste-water treatment and legislation of minimum quality standards. Humankind continues to use the oceans as a vast dumping ground for its waste products, even though little is known about the effects of such wastes on marine ecosystems. It is no exaggeration to say that the misuse of water resources will become a major source of conflict between communities, states, and nations in the years to come. Already several disputes over rights to clean water have taken on international significance.

Since the early 1980s the acid rain problem has assumed scientific, economic, and political prominence in North America and Europe. This major environmental problem serves to illustrate the interdependence of the various hydrologic sciences with other scientific disciplines and human activities. As was noted earlier, waste gases (primarily oxides of sulfur and nitrogen) enter the atmosphere from the burning of fossil fuels by automobiles and electric power plants. These gases combine with water vapour in the atmosphere to form sulfuric and nitric acids. When rain or some other form of precipitation falls to Earth, it is highly acidic (often with a pH value of less than 4). The resultant acidification of surface and subsurface waters has been shown to have detrimental effects on the ecology of affected catchments. Areas underlain by slowly weathering bedrock, such as in Scandinavia, the Adirondack Mountains of New York, and the Canadian Shield in Quebec are particularly susceptible. Many lakes in these areas have been shown to be biologically dead. There also is evidence that the growth of trees may be affected, with consequent economic ramifications where forestry is a major activity. The areas most greatly affected may be far downwind of the source of the pollution. A number of countries have claimed that the major sources of acid rain affecting their streams and lakes lie outside their borders.

Research has revealed that in an area susceptible to the effects of acid rain short-lived events can have a particularly damaging effect. These “acid shocks” may be due to inputs of highly acid water from a single storm or to the first snowmelt outflows in which the major part of the pollutant input accumulated over the winter is concentrated. The way in which the chemistry of the input water is modified in its flow through the catchment depends both on the nature of the soils and rocks in the catchment and on the flow paths taken through the system. These interactions are at present poorly understood. It is likely, however, that the attempt to understand the chemical processes within the different flow paths will lead to significant improvements in scientific understanding of catchment hydrology.

Concern over groundwater quantity and quality

Groundwater problems are becoming increasingly serious in many areas of the world. Rapid increases in the rates of pumping of groundwater in many aquifers has caused a steady lowering of water table levels where extraction has exceeded rates of recharge. A notable example is the Ogallala aquifer, a sandy formation some 100 metres thick, which lies beneath the Great Plains from South Dakota to Texas. It has been estimated that as much as 60 percent of the total storage of this huge aquifer has already been extracted primarily for agricultural use. The remaining water, if it continues to be mined in this way, will become more and more expensive to extract. This situation points out the importance of understanding groundwater flow and recharge processes in complex heterogeneous formations so that safe yields of aquifers can be properly predicted.

There are many causes of groundwater pollution; most are the accidental or incidental consequences of human activities (e.g., pollution resulting from the use of artificial fertilizers or saltwater intrusion into coastal aquifers due to excessive pumping). In some cases, however, groundwater may be contaminated because of planned human effort. Subsurface repositories of water, for example, have been considered as possible receptacles for waste products, including radioactive materials. This has resulted in both experimental and model studies of water flows in poorly permeable massive rocks that would be used to store such wastes. The effects of joints and fractures on the very slow transport of contaminants over long periods of time in such rocks is as yet uncertain but must be clarified if this form of storage is to be proved safe.