Saturday, April 5, 2014

Final Exam!

The final exam is 10 pages and 30 questions/items at least one of which is easy and at least one of which is hard. The questions are:

74% Short answer
15% Multiple choice
9% Matching
2% Fill in the blank

...and the points will come from the following subject categories:

15% Floods and flood mitigation
14% Dams and hydroelectric
14% Water use
12% Global WaSH
10% Hydrography
8% Specific local/regional water resource challenges
8% Other
8% Large-scale water diversion
7% Colorado River
2% Desalination
2% Rainfall and rainwater harvesting

Friday, April 4, 2014

Friday Week Twelve

...some questions...

1. What is going on with the WV Water Crisis? Why is WVAWC replacing the carbon filter bed at their Kanawha Valley Treatment Plant? How do you pronounce "Kanawha"? Why did they wait for so long? What two new laws have been recently passed in WV in response to the spill? What is the WV TAP? What where their findings? What are the ongoing, long-term effects of the spill and resulting crisis?

2. What was the collective change in perception of water quality for our class based on personal experience and based on the data presented in our respective CCRs? Should we be concerned about the quality of our water? Why (and/or why not)? How does the system for regulating water quality in bottled water in the US ensure that bottled water is consistently higher in quality than public tap water (or does it)?

3. How close is the nearest Superfund site? Had most of our class heard of their closest Superfund site? What are the most common contaminants at Superfund sites? What are the most commonly mentioned treatment methods at Superfund sites? Why is it problematic that one of the most commonly mentioned treatment method is soil removal? As a water resources class, why are we interested in all TRI facilities and not just those that release directly to water?

4. According to the collective analysis of our class, what are the world's top water resource countries? What are the characteristic of these countries? Upon further inspection, what country might not belong in the top 5? 

5. According to the collective analysis of our class, what are the world's worth water resource countries? What are the characteristic of these countries? Upon further inspection, what country might not belong in the top (bottom) 5? 

Slides from today are on Sakai. There will be an exam review session on Sunday at 3:00pm in G22. Please come ready to have all of your questions answered or further obfuscated.

Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Wednesday Week Twelve

...with special thanks to Alex and Cort!

1. Where is Bolivia? What are the specific characteristics of the physiography, rainfall distribution, and population density distribution that provide a backdrop for natural water resource management challenges? According to "the numbers," what are Bolivia's water resource management challenges and how are they doing in addressing these problems.

2. Where is Guatemala? According to "the numbers," what are Guatemala's water resource management challenges and how are they doing in addressing these problems.

3. What is Engineers Without Borders? What are their specific goals in Guatemala and Bolivia?

4. How does a biosand filter work? Does it contain sand? What is the Schmutzdecke? Where does a biosand filter get its energy? What water specific quality challenges does biosand filtration manage well? What water specific quality challenges does biosand filtration not manage well? How do nails manage viral contamination? Why are they refering to a biosand filter as an "appropriate technology"? What sort of application scales are appropriate

5. How is a ceramic pot filter made? How does a ceramic pot filter work?

6. What are the specific water resource management challenges that affect the community of Pampoyo, Bolivia? How is EWB helping them to manage this challenge? How does creating a clean water supply for lamas have a secondary effect of improving surface water quality in the area? What is an "eco-latrine"?

7. Why is it a big deal that the privatization of municipal water increased the price of domestic water substantially in Cochabamba, Bolivia?

8. What is the implied goal of increasing the number people in a community with access to improved sanitation? What is the three-step evolution toward effective management of sanitary waste? How is sanitary waste managed in rural vs urban settings in developed nations? How are we (as a global community) doing in providing access to improved sanitation?

9. What does unsustainable groundwater use look like? Why do some areas have unsustainable rates of groundwater use? What are some areas in the USA that have experienced unsustainable rates of groundwater withdrawals in recent history?

10. What seven countries are so effective at withdrawing groundwater that they are responsible for 75% of the world's annual groundwater withdrawals? Which of these countries have sustainable rates of groundwater withdrawals and the country level?

11. Even though India as a country has a groundwater withdrawal rate of 45.3%, why is it important that the replenishable groundwater of Punjab is 39% of groundwater withdrawals for the state? Where is Punjab? Where does their water come from?

Slides (including EWB material) is on Sakai. Your final assigned reading is the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

Monday, March 31, 2014

Monday Week Twelve

...some questions...

1. What is included in the acronym WaSH?

2. How old are the oldest wells, toilets, modern flush toilets, modern sewers, and modern methods of chemical water treatment? What was the role of John Snow in furthering our understanding of water-borne illness and combating water-borne illness?

3. What are the hygiene, convenience, and (possibly) asthetic advantages of improved sanitation facilities?

4. What is the implied challenge of improving the number of people with access to an improved water source? How are we (as a global community) doing in providing access to an improved source of drinking water? Is all "improved" drinking water "safe"? Is all "safe" drinking water "improved"?

5. How is access to an improved source of drinking water managed in developed communities in urban and rural areas? What are the barriers to increasing access to an improved source of drinking water in less developed (lower HDI) counties in urban and rural areas?

Slides from today are on Sakai.

Friday, March 28, 2014

Final Homework Assignment



The spreadsheet GEOL 150 Winter 2014 world water data.xlsx contains the most recent accessible information for most countries in the world for available freshwater resources, assess to water and sanitation, volume and type of withdrawals, economic and social development indicators, and population. Use this information to answer the following questions and turn in your work as a .doc(x) by the beginning of class on Wednesday. Notes: 1. Even if it is not stated in the question/item, all questions should be answered “for the data available”. For instance, we do not have data for many of the small Caribbean Island nations (or other small nation states) so we will exclude them from this large-scale analysis. 2. For item #5, use the linear rate of change – the easiest way is with excel’s linest function.
1a. What is the volume per person per day of freshwater withdrawals for domestic use in the USA? (provide your answer in US gallons/person/day to the nearest gallon)?
1b. How many countries have higher domestic use than the USA? 
1c. What are the three countries with the lowest volume of domestic water use and what are their respective rates of use- for which data exist (provide your answer in US gallons/person/day to the nearest gallon)?
1d. What country outside of either Africa or Asia has the lowest domestic use?
2a. How many countries in 2011 had unsustainable rates of freshwater withdrawals?
2b. In which countries do annual withdrawals exceed available freshwater resources by an order of magnitude or more?
2c. What % of Earth’s population resides in a country with unsustainable rates of freshwater withdrawals?
2d. What is the dominant use of water in countries with unsustainable rates of freshwater withdrawals?
3a. How many countries have a higher rate of access to an improved water source for rural populations than for urban populations?
3b. What is the respective percent of the world’s urban and rural populations that have access to an improved water source?
4a. In how many countries are residents more likely to have access to cellular coverage than to sanitation facilities?
4b. In how many countries are residents more likely to have access to electricity than to an improved water source?
4c. What percent of the world’s  population has access to the following: cellular coverage, access to sanitation facilities, access to electricity, and access to an improved water source?
5a. Use the data in the “water” tab to answer- How many countries experienced a decrease in the percent of its population with access to an improved drinking water source from 1990-2011? How about 2002-2011?
5b. Use the data in the “sanitation” tab to answer- How many countries experienced a decrease in the percent of its population with access to improved sanitation facilities from 1990-2011? How about 2002-2011?
6a. Plot %access to water as a function of per capita freshwater availability, annual freshwater withdrawals, corruption, and per capita GDP (on four different graphs). Describe the relationships that you observe.
7a. Plot child mortality as a function of, %access to water, %access to sanitation, corruption, and per capita GDP (on four different graphs). Describe the relationships that you observe.
8a. Develop your own weighted metric for quantifying water resources and a water resource availability at the country scale. Describe your metric and list (in order) the five countries with the best water resources and the five countries with the worst water resources according to your calculations.

Friday Week Eleven

...some questions...

1. Continuing on material from the Water Bill Homework Assignment... Why did water use in athletic building and facilities increase sharply during the fifth billing period of 2013? Why did water use in non-academic building and facilities increase sharply during the fifth billing period of 2013? Did we effectively explain the high per resident water use at Kappa Alpha? Did we effectively explain the high per resident water use at Kappa Delta? Did we effectively explain the high per resident water use at the Lee House?

2. Over the past few decades, is installed global desalination capacity increasing, decreasing or remaining relatively constant? What is the difference between membrane and thermal desalination? Is one growing more rapidly than the other (if so, which one)? Is one better than the other? What are the specific characteristics of a country that allow it to managing its water resource challenges with large desalination capacity?

3. Where is Bangladesh? What are its hydrologic, physiographic, demographic, and development characteristics that intensify its water resource management challenges? What are the specific water resource management challenges faced by Bangladesh? What was the first (historically) challenge? How was the first challenge managed? How did the management of the first challenge create (or exacerbate) a new challenge)? Why are these challenges more profound in the southern 1/3 of the country? What are some of the ongoing barriers to managing water resources challenges in Bangladesh?

Slides from today are on Sakai.

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Wednesday Week Eleven

...some questions...

1. What is going on (water-wise) in California right now?

2. Outside of the fact that the current situation has 98% of the state in a drought, water are the ongoing water management challenges that California as a state experiences?  How do they manage low levels of average annual accumulated precipitation in areas that are either densely populated or agriculturally important? How do they manage high intra-annual variability in precipitation how do they manage high inter-annual variability in precipitation. How do they manage pre-historic (dendrochronologic) evidence for multi-decade-long dry spells? How do they manage sharknados?

3. What does the Colorado River Aqueduct do? What does the LA/Owens Valley Aqueduct do? What does the California Aqueduct do?

4. What are some quantitative mechanisms for understanding and communicating variability (in precipitation)? Why does Southern California have the potential for such highly variable precipitation? How does this present two distinctive challenges?

5. Why is there a drought in California right now?

6. What evidence is there for droughts in California's prehistoric past? How long/bad were these drought periods relative to the current one?

7. Why is California considering building desalination plants in response to the current drought? Why might this not be a good idea?

8. What does California do with its water? What would an ongoing drought mean for the future of California?


Slider from today are on Sakai. Your assigned reading for Friday is Ocean's Dilemma from the most recent issue of Time Magazine (available as a s.pdf in the resources folder of Sakai).

Monday, March 24, 2014

Water Footprint Calculator Thing



Download the excel file: WaterFootprintYourNameHere.xlsx from the Sakai resources page, complete the questions below in the spreadsheet for between 1 and 10 water footprint calculators (after, of course, you have submitted your information to the calculator) and return the completed spreadsheet to me via email by the beginning of class on Wednesday, April 2nd. For each complete submission, you will receive 1 point toward your midterm exam with any “overflow” points (points that would bring your exam grade above 100) going into quiz points. You may submit results and answers for as many as 10 calculators; anyone who submits results from a unique calculator (unique in that they are the only student in the class to use this particular calculator) will receive an additional 0.5 points for each unique calculator submission (and I have final say with regard to classification as a “unique” submission). If you have any questions, please let me know.  I will share the results of this meta-analysis with the class but will not share individual responses in a manner that would identify the submissions of a particular respondent.
Note: if the answer to question #7 is no, for the calculator that you are using and you are asked to provide information about your income, use the median income for female/male, 25+, with a bachelor’s degree of US$50,944/year.
1. What is the name of the water footprint calculator (use a provided name or invent a generally descriptive name like “National Geographic” or Water Footprint Network Extended”)
2. What is the direct link to the calculator?
3. Would you classify this calculator as a brief, extended or somewhere in the middle?
4. How long did you take to complete this calculator? (answer to the nearest minute)
5. According to this calculator, what is your water use in US gallons per day? (###)
6. Are you female or male? (female/male)
7. Does this calculator specifically consider your gender in its calculation? (yes/no)
8. Does this calculator consider either specifically or generally the idea that you may be in college? (yes/no)
9. Does this calculator consider either specifically or generally the nature of water use as consumptive, non-consumptive, and/or semi-consumptive? (yes/no)
10. Does this calculator consider either specifically or generally the concept of green, blue, gray, and/or black water use? (yes/no)
11. Does this calculator assume (either explicitly or implicitly) your country of residence? (yes- USA, yes- EU, yes- other (write country name here), no- but I got to indicate my country of residence, or no- and I was not able to indicate my country of residence)
12. Indicate which calculator was your favorite and which was your least favorite. (favorite/least favorite)

Monday Week Eleven

...some questions...

1. What is the difference between per per capital domestic water use between a high-use state and a low-use state? What is the volume of domestic use for a low use state (gal/day/cap)? What is the volume of domestic use for a high use state (gal/day/cap)?How is water use data collected? Why is it important to consider the specific metric of water use when interpreting a water use map? What is a "withdrawal"? Where is a withdrawal?

2. Where does the vast majority of the 23 gallons of water used in the production of a 12 oz. can of Coke get used? What does a look at the volume of water required for producing a 3.5 oz. potato vs a 3.5 oz. bag of potato chips tell us about the water footprint of more heavily processed vs more lightly processed foods? Why is the water footprint of grass-fed beef so different from the water footprint of grain-fed beef? Where does the vast majority of the 28 gallons of water used in the production of a 12 oz. can of beer get used?

3. What is the difference between green, blue, and gray water? Why is it important to consider the "color" of the water when evaluating the water footprint )(volume) of a particular product? Why is it important to note that the numbers that we have been using in class are for global average water footprint (how might your local/regional/national footprint volume/color vary)?

Slides from today are on Sakai. Your assigned reading for Wednesday is The water footprint of poultry, pork and beef: A comparative study in different countries and production systems (.pdf) by Gerbens-Leenes et al. in Water Resource and Industry (peer-reviewed) 2013. We will have help sessions for the W&L Water Bill Homework Assignment Monday (tonight) at 7:30 in A115 and Tuesday at 7:00 also in A115. Instructions for the water footprint extra credit thing are here.

Friday, March 21, 2014

W&L Water Bill Homework

Use the data stored in GEOL150WandLWaterBillHW.xls (available on Sakai) to address the following items. Please submit your responses as a .doc(x) including the requested graphs either printed or via email by Friday March 28.

1. What campus building used the most volume of water in 2013?

2. What campus building used the least volume of water in 2013?

3. What campus building used the most water in 2013 when water use is normalized for the size (area) of the building?

4. What campus building used the least water in 2013 when water use is normalized for the size (area) of the building?

5. What percent of university water use came from the following categories in 2013?
a. academic
b. non-academic
c. athletic
d. residential (include fraternities and sororities)
make a pie chart...

6. Calculate the average water use per person per day in US gallons for residents of campus fraternities, campus sororities, and other campus residence halls. Which groups of residents used the most water in 2013? Which groups of residents used the least water in 2013? Is there a large difference between the three groups?

7. Make a 2-D column graphs of per resident water use per day in US gallons for all of the residential buildings (include fraternities and sororities). Are there any outliers? What are the top (or bottom) residence, top dorm, top sorority and top fraternity in terms of least per resident water use in 2013? What are the top residence, top dorm, top sorority and top fraternity in terms of highest per resident water use in 2013?  Why are these particular buildings the highest and lowest per resident users of water? (there may not be an interesting answer to this but I am interested to hear your input).

8. Plot the percent of yearly water use during a 2-month billing period for the following categories: academic, non-academic, athletic, and residential (include fraternities and sororities) buildings for the six billing periods of 2013 (your graph should be an xy scatter graph with billing period (1-6 or months) on the x axis and % on the y axis and four lines...). Describe the variation (or lack thereof) in seasonal water use throughout our campus.

Friday Week Ten

...some questions...

1.What is the difference between consumptive use and non-consumptive use? Why is water consumption (almost always) different that food or energy consumption? Why does water have value? Can water be a liability (have a value that is less than zero)? How does water use change its value? Can you map the progression of the following categories of use in value-time space: domestic, recreational, agricultural, industrial? Will all industrial water uses have the same path? Will all agricultural uses? Is there a possibility for semi-consumptive water use?

2. What is an ecological footprint? What is a water footprint? Why is it called a water footprint if it is a volume instead of an area? Is the water used in themoelectric electricity generation considered in a water footprint calculation? What do the water footprint calculations of Hoekstra and Chapagain (2007) say about the per capita water consumption in the US vs. the rest of the world? What about China?

3. What do the high rates of per capita water use in ID, MT, and WY say about the people that live there? 

Slides shown today are on Sakai. Your assigned reading for Monday as well as your homework for next Wednesday and your "extra" credit opportunity will be up tomorrow (Saturday) morning.

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Wednesday Week Ten

...some questions...

1. How variable is the flooding history of the James River Watershed? What are the biggest storms in the instrumental record for this watershed? Why was the flooding from Agnes the largest Flood at the James River in Richmond? Why was the flooding from Camile the largest flood at Buena Vista?

2. How do the flooding mitigation challenges differ between Lexington, Buena Vista, and Glasgow? Which city has traditionally had the greatest collective challenge? What are some of the things that Lexington has done to manage its flood risk? What are some of the things that BV has done to mange its flood risk? What are some of the things that Glasgow has done to manage its flood risk? What role has FEMA and USACE played in managing our local flood risks?

3. How does a floodwall work? How does a flood control-dam/reservoir work? Why does this prevent some additional reservoir/dam uses? How many flood-control dams are there in the lower 48? Where are they located? Are there any flood-control dams currently protecting us here in Lexington? If so, where are they?

4. What do the hydrographs upstream and downstream of a flood-control reservoir like like during a large storm event?

5.  Mitigation is the effort to reduce loss of life and property by lessening the impact of disasters. What are flood mitigation steps that can be taken before, during, and after a flood? What are some of the major barriers to effective flood mitigation in the USA?

Slides from today are on Sakai.

Monday, March 17, 2014

Monday Week Ten

...some questions...

1. Why is the physiographic setting of Johnstown, PA such a nice place for a city? Why is the physiographic setting of Johnstown, PA such a nice place for a flood?

2. Johnstown is at the confluence of the Little Conemaugh and the Conemaugh Rivers. Are these large rivers? Compared to what? 

3. Where was Conemaugh Lake and the South Fork Dam in relation to Jonestown? What is there now?

4. Who built the South Fork Dam? When was is built? What was it made out of? What was special about it at the time? Who were the subsequent owners? What were some of the recent (period) modifications to the dam made by the South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club that are important to the flood story?

5. What kind of discharge do you get when 6-10 inches of rain falls in 24 hours on a 119 square mile watershed? How does this compare to the "normal" discharge on the Little Conemaugh River? What kind of discharge do you get when you empty a 4.8 billion gallon reservoir in 45 minute?


6. What happened when the flash flood from the failure of the South Fork dam reached the Conemaugh Viaduct? Why did this exacerbate the flash flood that would eventually reach Johnstown?

7. How did the industrial areas on the upstream side of town and the Railroad Bridge on the downstream side of town exacerbate the flooding? 

8.What were some of the barriers to effective warning and evacuation? In recalling the damage from the flood, why is it important to think in terms of percents instead of total numbers?

9. Why was the role of the American Red Cross so important in the aftermath of the flood? What were the results of the legal aftermath of the flood? What is an "Act of God?"

10. Why was the "Great Mississippi Flood of 1927" so great?

11. How bad were the floods in Colorado last year? Why were they so bad? Why should you never recreate in urban flood waters?

Slides from today are on Sakai.

Friday, March 14, 2014

Friday Week Nine

...some questions...

1. Why is it important to begin any discussion of flooding with a look at were humans tend to live? What are the advantages to living close to water? What are the advantages of settling in flood plains? How long did it take for the US to have a top-10 population city that is not on a coast or inland navigable waterway? What are the current 3 top-10 US cities that are not reachable by boat?

2. Why do floods occur? Why is the answer more complicated than "rain"? What is the difference between acute and chronic rainfall? What about snow melt? How does the permeability of the ground change when it is frozen and how might this contribute to flooding severity during snow melt? How are floods like snowflakes?

3. Why is the permeability of the surface of a watershed so important to both the timing and a magnitude of a flood crest? What are some of the key ways to create large-scale changes in the permeability of a watershed? How and why does the amount and type of vegetation in a watershed affect flooding severity? How and why does the slope of a watershed affect flooding severity?

4. What are the differences between the specific hazards of a regional and flash floods? Why is it important to rember that binary classifications like this are more effective if you remember to consider the continuum between the end members?

5.  Why are so many of the USA's historically deadly terrestrial natural disasters floods? Why is it important to not that the deadliest natural disasters in the USA are not very deadly compared to some of the deadliest natural disasters in the history of the world?

6. Johnstown questions will be on Monday's post.
 
Slides shown today are on Sakai. Your assigned reading for Monday is A year after Waldo Canyon fire, Colorado town contends with flooding by Jenny Deam in the August 29, 2013 edition of the LA Times and Flood Forensics: Why Colorado's Floods Were So Destructive by Christopher Joyce from NPR October 08, 2013 (please note that my assigning this article should not imply my endorsement of the title's misuse of the term "forensic"). The homework assignment on recurrence interval and flooding in our area that is due next Wednesday will be up on Saturday morning (sorry for the delay). There will be a help session 7:30pm on Monday in A115- bring your computer.

Recurrence interval homework

0. This assignment will use data from the USGS stream gauges that are located on the Maury River up- and downstream of Lexington. You should have already been to the stream gauge sites for the Maury River at Buena Vista and Rockbridge Baths but before, you were accessing current conditions- this time you will be looking at historical data. To do this, go to "Summary of all data for this site" for BV or Rockbridge Baths (it does not matter which you do first) and select ""Peak streamflow". This will give you the highest discharge measurement collected during each of the years that the gauge has been operational. Request the date in table format and copy and paste it into an excel spreadsheet.

1. How far apart are these two stream gauges as the crow flies?

2. Sort your data according to discharge (the the highest discharge year at the top). What are the five years with the highest discharge events?

3. In how many years has the rivers at either of these stream gauges been at flood stage (using the NWS definition)?

4. How many years of record are available for each of the stream gauges?

5. Assign a rank and calculate a recurrence interval for the peak discharge event for each year.

6. Plot discharge (y axis) as a function of recurrence interval (x axis) on a scatter plot with a logarithmic scale on the x axis. Format a logarithmic trend-line through two or three portions of the data so that you get a visually good fit (you will not be able to do this with only one trend for all of the data).

7. Select "display equation on chart" or use the linest function to find the relationship between the recurrence interval and the discharge for all or your trend-lines.

8. Use these equations to calculate the discharge for 10- 50- and 100-year floods for both gauges.

9. How many times larger is the dishcarge for a 10-year event at RBB than for your observed discharge at Jordans Point Park this week?

10. Given the nature of the observations available to you, comment one your ability to effectively characterize the discharge for10-, 50-, and 100- year flooding events in our area?

Send me an email with a .doc(x) file with the following:

1. distance between stream gauges

2. top five years (in order) for BV and RBB... Question:

3. numbers of years with "floods" BV and RBB

4. years of record for BV and RBB

6. ...plots for both gauges...

7. ...equations with ranges of appropriate recurrence interval for both gauges

8. 10- 50- and 100-year floods for both gauges

9.  Xtimes...

10. brief (but effective) answer...

by the beginning of class on Wednesday.

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Wednesday Week Nine

...some questions...

1. Why did I take so long introducing the two OLOs that I can't talk about together here?

2. What is a flood? Can we just define it as a rare, high-water event? What is the does the default method for reporting streamflow conditions by the USGS? Is this an effective mechanism for defining a flood? What method is used by the National Weather Service? According the NWS, location-specific definition, has there been a flood on the Maury River at BV in the past 356 days? Has there been anything even close to a flood? What about the Maury River at Rockbridge Baths? Why is there a difference? What metric does FEMA use when defining a flood?

3. What is a FEMA Flood Insurance Rate Map? What is the gist of the agreements between the local authorities that are responsible for zoning (building) codes and the US federal government? Why is this important?

4. What is a recurrence interval? How is it calculated? What are the two possible definitions of a 100-year flood? What is the relationship between recurrence interval and discharge?

Slides from today are on Sakai.

Monday, March 10, 2014

Monday Week Nine

...some questions...

1. What is the discharge of the Maury River at Jordans Point Park? What about now?

2. What is a human development index score? What is factors are considered in calculating HDI? Are these an effective measure of human development? What is the relationship between HDI and per capita energy consumption resolved at the nation-state level?  Why is it important the specific shape of this relationship important? Why is the position of a nation-state in HDI- energy consumption space important when weighing the costs and benefits of a project that would add generation capacity?

3. What is special about the Three Gorges Dam? hint 1: What is special about its generation capacity? hint 2: What is special about the difference between its generation capacity and the actual annual amount of energy that is generated? hint 3: How many people were displaced as a result of this project?

4. Where is the Quabbin Reservoir? What is the purpose of the dam (in this case, the Windsor Dam and the Goodnough Dike) and reservoir? What are the costs and benefits of the reservoir? What are the specific costs that are communicated by Jane Yollen in her book, Letting Swift River Go?

Slides from today are on Sakai. You may arrange to borrow Letting Swift from me but only if you promise to read it to a child who should be learning about large-scale grave exhumations anyway.

Friday, March 7, 2014

Friday Week Eight

...some questions...

1. so... I guess there is a big crack in the Wanapum Dam... Why is this important?

2. so... generating electricity with a dam (hydroelectric) has low life-cycle emissions of carbon dioxide equivalent per unit of electricity generate... Why is this only one (important) consideration when defining an energy source as being "green" or "sustainable"?

3. How do you develop any context for discharge? You go to the Jordans Point Dam as part of this week's homework assignment.

Slides from today are on Sakai.

Jordans Point Dam Homework Assignment

Step 1: Go to Jordans Point Dam and observe the water flowing over the dam for at least 5 minutes.

Step 2: Immortalize the moment by photographing yourself at the dam- email the photograph to me.

Step 3: Look up the discharge of the Maury River upstream at Rockbridge Baths and downstream at Buena Vista online at the USGS Waterwatch website during your observation time.

Step 4: Use the formula below to interpolate the discharge at Jordans Point based on the relative area of its watershed:


Step 5: Multiply your interpolated discharge at Jordans Point by 0.9 to account for the 10% of water the bypasses the dam via the spillway at this location. Report this number to me to the nearest cfs. This is the volume of water (per unit time) flowing over the dam during your visit.

Step 6: Use the formula E = p*z*Q*g*k were E = energy in watts, p = density of water, z = height of dam (2.5 meters), Q = discharge, g = acceleration due to gravity, and k = efficiency factor (0.7) to determine the amount of power (in watts) that could be generated at this site using the discharge at the time of your visit. Make sure that your units are all in combinations of m, kg, and s. Report this number to be to the nearest watt.

Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Wednesday Week Eight

...questions...

1. (continuing from Friday) Why is the distribution of US dams by completion date important? Why is it particularly important for some of our large hydroelectric dam in the West?

2. Why is the timing of the construction of the Hoover Dam (1931-6) important? Was $4/day a a good wage back in the 1930s? Could the Hoover Dam be built today?

3.Why is the timing of the completion of the Grand Coulee Dam important in US (and World) history? Is there such a thing as "extra" generation capacity? 

4. What is meant by "life-cycle" emissions of carbon dioxide equivalent? Why is hydro lowish but not zero?

5. (Exam stuff) Who (according to our class) is most at fault for the WV Water Crisis? What are men and seniors more likely to argue that the water being supplied by the WVAWC is "safe"? NPR report asking this same question more recently... The source water assessment report from 2002 that I used for the final question on our midterm is here (.pdf). The new one that Downstream Strategies published after our exam is here (.pdf). 

Slides from today are on Sakai. Your assigned reading for Friday is The Beautiful and the Dammed by Patrick Symmes in the June 2010 issue of Outside Magazine.

Monday, March 3, 2014

Monday Week Eight

no class today... spend some time thinking about individual and institutional preparation and resilience in the face of frozen water.

Friday, February 28, 2014

Friday Week Seven

...some questions...

1. What is the National Inventory of Dams? About how many dams are in the inventory? What dams are included/not included in the inventory?

2. What are the most common primary stated purposes of dams in the NID? Do most dams have one or multiple stated purposes?

3. What is the Bureau of Reclamation? What are "they" "reclaming"?Where (geographically) do they do most of their work? What is the other major federal agency that builds dams in the US? Why do we need two different federal agencies to build dams?

4. What is siltation? What causes siltation? Why is siltation such a barrier to the sustainability of dams at an individual and collective level? 

5. How do dams affect biodiversity?

6.  When did the rate of dam construction peak in the USA? Why is this important? When did our hydroelectric capacity increase? When did it stop increasing? What is the general metric for the design life of a dam? (according to the American Society of Civil Engineers)?

7. Is there such as thing as excess capacity to generate electricity?

Slides from today are on Sakai.

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Wednesday Week Seven

...some questions...

1. Where does Buena Vista (BV), Virginia get its (domestic) water? Where is BV? What are their water management challenges and how have they been managing those challenges? Special thanks to HB for the story!

2. Why does the discharge vary downstream of the Glen Canyon Dam?

3. Over a 24-hour cycle, when do electrical consumers consume the greatest amount of electricity? How does this affect the price of electricity? If individual electricity consumers pay a standard fixed price per kilowatt-hour (a unit of electricity measurement), who covers this short-term price volatility? What drive/controls energy use at the individual consumer level?

3. What is an energy portfolio? What does it mean to have a diverse energy portfolio? Does the USA have a diverse energy portfolio wrt electricity generation? How do we generate our electricity? How does electricity generation vary from place to place within the USA (in our examples from class from state to state)?

4. How do we change chemical potential energy, into thermal energy, into mechanical energy into electrical energy? What about gravitational potential energy? Where does water fit into the conversion of thermal energy into mechanical energy? What is the difference between a turbine and a generator?

5. What are the factors that determine the amount of power a hydroelectric plant can generate?

6. How can methods of electricity generation (coal, biomass, nuclear, hydro, natural gas, petroleum, tidal, geothermal, solar thermal, solar PV, and wind) be characterized with regard to whether or not they are controllable or predictable? From the standpoint of an electrical grid operator, what characteristic(s) is/are more valuable? From an electrical consumer standpoint, what characteristic(s) is/are more valuable?

7. What is a pump storage plant? How is it different than a "regular" hydroelectric plant? What major challenge to the electrical grid does a PSP manage?


Slides from today are on Sakai. Your assigned reading for Friday is Chapter 3: First Causes from Marc Reisner's Cadillac Desert. A .pdf is available at Sakai--> Resources --> Readings --> Cadillac Desert Chapter 3 (you should have already read chapter 4).

Monday, February 24, 2014

Monday Week Seven

...some questions...

1. Midterm Exam questions 8, 9, 14, and 22 (revisited)

2. What would a source water assessment report for the Maury Service Authority look like? Is it a good idea to drink water straight from the Maury? How would you (minimally) have to treat it?

Slides from today are on Sakai.

Friday, February 14, 2014

Friday Week Six

...some questions...

1. What is hydrography? What is a hydrograph? What is a hydrogram? Where do you go to access hydrographic data for US rivers? What does a hydrogram for an unmanaged, eastern US river (such as the Maury River) look like?

2. What is special about the Colorado River? What are its headwaters? What do we mean when we say that the state of Colorado has an 80 80 problem? How does the Big Thompson Project address the 80 80 problem? What does this mean for the Colorado River?

3. What are the major dams along the Colorado River? What are the major diversion projects? What cities rely on water from the CO river for their domestic use? What important agricultural areas are allowed or augmented by irrigation water from the CO river?

There were no slides used in class today.

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Wednesday Week Six

...some questions...

1. Where is the Colorado River? Perhaps more importantly, where is the Colorado River watershed? What is a watershed? Where is the division between the upper and lower Colorado River watersheds? What are the rainfall patterns within the watershed? How is the gradient of the Colorado River different than other rivers of similar size? Why is gradient important in determining the characteristic of a river? 

2. What is special about the Colorado River? Why is it so important (or is it)? How is the Colorado River currently different from its unregulated state? 

3. What is the Colorado River Compact? How does the Colorado River Compact deal with inter-annual variability? What determines who gets how much water?

4. What is a hydrograph? What is discharge? What are the units of discharge? What does a hydrograph for a naturally flowing river look like? What about a river just downstream of a hydroelectric dam? What about an other type of dam? 

5. What is the "Grand Flush"? Why do we have to "flush" the Grand Canyon periodically?

Slides from today are on Sakai. Materials for the Colorado River Homework Assignment are up on Sakai as well. Your assigned reading for Friday is Exporting the Colorado River to Asia, Through Hay by Ben Jervey Published January 23, 2014 in National Geographic.

Colorado River Homework

This assignment will require that you access a spreadsheet (GEOL150CORiverHW.xls) and a google Earth file (Colorado River.kml) both of which are available on the resources folder on our Sakai site. If you do not have google Earth on the computer that you will  be using to complete this assignment, you can download it for free and use it on any computer with a connection to the internet. I assume that you all have access to excel- let me know if this is not the case (Open Office Calc works fine as well). You should turn in this sheet and a document (word or word equivalent) with your written responses to 2-7 and graphs for 2,3,5,6, and 7. Your responses do not have to be long or detailed as long as they effectively demonstrate that you are able to make (reasonable) conclusions from the data that you are given.

The spreadsheet contains hydrographic data for eight stream gauges along the Colorado River that were operating throughout 2013. The raw data is made available to the public by the Unites States Geologic Survey and is available in 15-minute intervals; I have taken the raw data, dealt with  missing portions, and reduced the resolution of the data by averaging the discharge to hourly, daily, and monthly intervals (there are three tabs named hourly, daily, and monthly…). The other tab contains a table with information about the locations of the stream gauges and other important landmarks along the river. The google Earth file will give you a geospatial context for the data and will be necessary for completion of #8. This assignment is due at the beginning of class on Wednesday, February 26th. I will be hosting help sessions for any interested students on the evenings of Monday and Tuesday after break (the 24th and 25th) and, of course, I will be available to assist via email or in person (including over the break).

1. Use the highest resolution data set to find the average discharge for each stream gauge. Provide this in the table in the “Table” tab and on the table on the back of this sheet in cubic feet per second (cfs) and millions of acre feet per year with three significant digits for each.

2. Plot an elevation profile for the Colorado River using the data provided in the “Table” tab. Describe the profile.

3. Plot the total volume of water for each stream gauge as a function of the contributing drainage area for the river at each stream gauge location. Describe what you see and note any evidence for large-scale diversion projects.

4. Find the difference in annual volume of water between each of the stream gauges. Match these numbers up with the large-scale diversion projects in #3 and include your numbers in the table on the back of this sheet.

5. Plot data from all eight stream gauges resolved at monthly intervals (average). Describe the similarities and differences between the discharge patterns of the Colorado River at the eight stream gauges. What does the difference between discharge patterns up and downstream of the Hoover Dam suggest about the importance of the storage capacity available at Lake Mead?

6. Plot the hourly resolved discharge for Lee’s Ferry and the Grand Canyon from June 30 to August 3. What is going on here? What is the average flow velocity for the reach in between these stream gauges? Give your answer in miles per hour with one significant digit.

7. Plot the daily resolved discharge for Lee’s Ferry for a few weeks. What does the pattern suggest about when we consume electricity?

8. Use the ruler tool in google Earth to find how far the Colorado River travels in Mexico before completely drying up for imagery collected on 4/9/2013 (probably the default) and on 8/18/2007. Use the diversion at the Morales Dam as the border crossing and give your answer to the nearest mile. How does this compare to complete distance to the Gulf of California. Express your answers as a percent of the total distance inside of Mexico with two significant digits.


Monday, February 10, 2014

Monday Week Six

...some questions...

1. What is going on with the water in WV? Why are people billing WVAWC? What is the response of WVAWC?

2. What is rainwater harvesting? What does the US government do to encourage of discourage rainwater harvesting? What do governments in do general general to get people to do things that are in the public interest? Why is rainwater harvesting in the public interest? What is LEED?

3. How do states regulate rainwater harvesting? Is there a pattern between state-level regulation with regard to the legality of harvesting rain?Why might the interpretation of prior appropriation doctrine present a problem for would-be rainwater harvesters? Why are interpretations by UT and CO so different from interpretations by TX and AZ?

4. What are the upsides and downsides of rainwater harvesting? What is(are) the major hurdle that prevents rainwater harvesting from becoming a more important piece of the water supply puzzle particularly in the regions that would benefit most from augmenting their water resources?

5. What does a small-scale, residential rainwater harvesting system look like? How must a system be modified to provide potable water?  

6. What are the rainfall parameters (expressed in average annual cumulative precipitation) for productive, irrigation-free agriculture? What are the rainfall parameters (expressed in average annual cumulative precipitation) for human inhabitation without substantial management of water resources?

Slides from today are on Sakai. There is no assigned reading for Wednesday (sorry).

Friday, February 7, 2014

Midterm Exam Information

Point on the midterm exam will come from the following subject areas:
22% water quality
17% global hydrologic cycle: present and future
14% water quality management
13% WV Water Crisis
9% water rights
4% water use
21% other

good luck with your preparation and I will see (many of) you at 7:00 pm Sunday in G22.

Friday Week Five

...some questions...

1. What is going on with the WV Water Crisis? Is the water safe to drink? Why are there schools that are cancelling class that show analytical results that are below detection limits for 4-MCHM? Who (locally) is/isn't drinking the water? What is the status of the White House Petition to "Investigate the mismanagement of the WV water disaster by the state and county officials as well as WV American Water"? How does this compare to other important petitions?

 2. What is an aquifer? How does the specific hydrologic definition vary from the more general use of the term? What is porosity? What is connectivity? What is permeability? How is permeability measured? What geologic materials have high permeabilities?

3. Where is the High Plains Aquifer (HPA) located? Why is the HPA such an important source of water? Where (generally) is the vertical thickness of the HPA greatest? Where (generally) are the rates of recharge the greatest? Where (generally) are the greatest rates of groundwater withdrawals for irrigation? Where (generally) is the drop (drawdown) in the surface of the water table greatest? Does this (the locations of areas of greatest drawdown) make sense based on the answers to all of the other #3 questions?

4.  What is groundwater-related subsidence? Why does it happen? Where (geographically) does it happen? Under what circumstance might it be a natural hazard?

5. How does TX use riparian and prior appropriation surface water rights law. What is a "California Doctrine" state? How does TX do groundwater?
 
Slides from today are on Sakai. Your assigned reading for Monday is Chapter 4: An American Nile from Cadillac Desert by Marc Reisner (1986, 1991)- it is available as a .pdf on our class Sakai site. All material from today might be covered on the midterm exam. Material covered henceforth (including the reading above) will not be covered on the midterm.

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Wednesday Week Five

Some questions...

1. What is Bloom's (revised) Taxonomy and what does it have to do with what we are doing here?

2. What happens when water falls from the sky? Why to we have to define some period of time in order to effectively address this question? What is a runoff ratio (or for that matter, what is an evaporation ratio?) Why doesn't the runoff ratio consider rainfall that infiltrates into the ground? What are some of the factors that favor evaporation?

3. What are the four potential sources for water resources? Is moisture farming science fiction?

4. Why are water rights laws different in different parts of the USA? What does it mean to "waste" water? Who regulates water rights in the USA?

5. What are the characteristics of water rights laws as defined under riparian doctrine? Where would you expect to find riparian doctrine areas? What are the climate characteristics of these areas? What is reasonable use? How are water rights transferred? How are shared water resources managed during a drought?

6. What is the doctrine of prior appropriation? What is beneficial use? What happens if you don't put your appropriation to beneficial use? How are water rights transferred? Why is it called the "Colorado Doctrine"? How are shared water resources managed during a drought? What is the difference between paper water and wet water?

7. What is  "California Doctrine"? How are water rights managed on tribal lands?

8. What is a water table? What governs the flow of water under the water table? What governs flow of underground water above the water table? What is a cone of depression (not to be confused with the cone of shame)? How are rights to groundwater "generally" regulated in the USA? What is the "law of the biggest pump"?

Slides from today are on Sakai. Your assigned reading is a really good look at water rights in a "California Doctrine" state A Texan's Guide to Water & Water Rights Marketing (.pdf) by the Texas Water Development Board (state government agency). I am pretty sure that you do not have to be Texan to read it. Our midterm exam review session will be 7:00 pm somewhere in the Science Center- I will figure it out and make an announcement on Friday in class.




Monday, February 3, 2014

Monday Week Five

...some questions...

1. Why does snow (or any kind of frozen or freezing precipitation) present a specific set of water resources management issues? What are the three geographic/physiographic/hydrologic factors that determine the climatological (annual average) levels of snowfall for a particular area? What are the water quality implications of snow management?How are snow management challenges different in areas that tend to receive lots of snow vs. those that tend to receive less? How much snow does it take to cancel school in VT? How about FL?

2. How does the presences of pharmaceuticals and their metabolites in surface water downstream of WWTP effluent discharge points suggest about the effectiveness of WWTPs with regard to managing these types of chemicals? What does concentrations of Ra in water above background levels in water downstream of WWTP effluent discharge points say about the effectiveness of WWTPs with regard to managing these types of chemicals? What about isotropically light Ra?

3. How are the source and mangement options different for dissolved inorganic and organic contaminants? How come we can use activated carbon/charcol filters on dissolved organic contaminants and not inorganic?

4. What are the main sources of pathogenic microorganisms that might contaminate a water resource? What three taxa of organisms are we talking about here? Will the same management procedures work for all three groups?

5. How is sediment pollution managed? Where does it come from?

6. How is thermal pollution managed? Where does it come from?

7. How are pH challenges managed? What are the two main sources of problematically low pH?

Slides from today are on Sakai. Sorry, there will be no assigned reading for Wednesday. 

Friday, January 31, 2014

FridayWeek Four

...some questions...

1. It appears as though some of the 4-MCHM in the Charleston-area water supply has turned into formaldehyde. Is this a good thing?

2. If 4% of US sewer systems combine storm water and sewage and 13% of US residents are served by systems that combine storm water and sewage, what does this mean about the nature of these CSS systems?

3. How do sewage treatment plants work? What are they good at? What aren't they good at?

For a change of pace from water quality, your assigned reading for the weekend is an article in the La Times from the past week's winter storm and its effect in the Atlanta area called Atlanta paralyzed by less than 3 inches of snow by David Zucchino and Lisa Mascaro. For a lighter look at the situation, please see the coverage by The Daily Show (~5 minute video) (sorry, it does not appear that Cobert Covered the story).


warning 1: You should, by now be familiar with the the concept of the The Daily Show, keep this in mind...

warning 2: Please consider that sometimes the Daily Show chooses to sacrifice accuracy for hilarity.

warning 3: These videos may contain insensitive remarks about Atlanta, Georgia, The South, and their inhabitants- current or recent; my assigning this video should not be inferred as an endorsement, implicit or explicit of their content.

Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Wednesday Week Four

...some questions...

1. The estimated volume of the 4-MCHM release in WV has been increased from 7,500 to 10,000 gallons. Why is the early underestimate surprising? Why is it not surprising?

2. What is distillation? How it is used to manage water quality challenges? What are the advantages to using distillation? What are the disadvantages?

3. How is dilution used to manage water quality? In what contexts is this an appropriate management tool? Is this generally, an effective method for managing drinking water?

4. How can minimizing evaporation be used to manage water quality?

5. What is nutrient pollution? What are the effects of augmenting nutrients in surface water systems? What is eutrophication? What is a dead zone and how does nutrient pollution contribute? What are the major point and non-point sources of nutrient pollution? 

6. How does the (natural) nitrogen cycle work? What do nitrogen fixing bacteria do? What do nitrifying bacteria do? What form of nitrogen do plants need? How do we affect the nitrogen cycle in modern agricultural systems to augment plant productivity?

7. What are the other important mechanisms for augmenting plant productivity in modern (post Green Revolution) agricultural systems? What is (was) the Green Revolution? What are the relative sustainabilities of these mechanisms? Where do we get P (geologically and geographically)?

Your assigned reading for Wednesday builds on Elizabeth Royte's look at legal drugs in post-treatment waters in Connecticut with a look at Italy and Cocaine in surface waters: a new evidence-based tool to monitor community drug abuse by Ettore Zuccato et al., published in 2005 in Environmental Health (peer-reviewed scientific journal). Slides from today are on Sakai.