Hydrogeology field manual:
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
New York [u.a.]
McGraw-Hill
2008
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Ausgabe: | 2. ed. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Contributor biographical information Publisher description Table of contents only Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | 1. Aufl. u.d.T: Weight, Willis D.: Manual of applied field hydrogeology. - 3. Aufl. u.d.T: Weight, Willis D.: Practical hydrogeology Includes bibliographical references and index |
Beschreibung: | XVI, 751 S. Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. 24 cm |
ISBN: | 0071477497 9780071477499 |
Internformat
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020 | |a 0071477497 |c alk. paper |9 0-07-147749-7 | ||
020 | |a 9780071477499 |c alk. paper |9 978-0-07-147749-9 | ||
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a Hydrogeology field manual |c Willis D. Weight |
250 | |a 2. ed. | ||
264 | 1 | |a New York [u.a.] |b McGraw-Hill |c 2008 | |
300 | |a XVI, 751 S. |b Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. |c 24 cm | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |b n |2 rdamedia | ||
338 | |b nc |2 rdacarrier | ||
500 | |a 1. Aufl. u.d.T: Weight, Willis D.: Manual of applied field hydrogeology. - 3. Aufl. u.d.T: Weight, Willis D.: Practical hydrogeology | ||
500 | |a Includes bibliographical references and index | ||
650 | 4 | |a Hydrogeology | |
650 | 0 | 7 | |a Angewandte Hydrogeologie |0 (DE-588)4142439-6 |2 gnd |9 rswk-swf |
689 | 0 | 0 | |a Angewandte Hydrogeologie |0 (DE-588)4142439-6 |D s |
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856 | 4 | |u http://www.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy0814/2007047464-b.html |3 Contributor biographical information | |
856 | 4 | |u http://www.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy0814/2007047464-d.html |3 Publisher description | |
856 | 4 | |u http://www.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy0814/2007047464-t.html |3 Table of contents only | |
856 | 4 | 2 | |m OEBV Datenaustausch |q application/pdf |u http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016463378&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |3 Inhaltsverzeichnis |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1804137596122562560 |
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adam_text | PREFACE XIII CHAPTERI. FIELD HYDROGEOLOGY 1 1.1 HYDROLOGIE CYCLE 2 1.2
WATER-BUDGET ANALYSIS 4 1.3 WATER-BUDGET MYTH 10 SUSTAINABILITY 11 WATER
AS A COMMODITY 12 CHANGES IN FLOW SYSTEMS 13 1.4 SOURCES OF INFORMATION
ON HYDROGEOLOGY 14 1.5 SITE LOCATION FOR HYDROGEOLOGIE INVESTIGATIONS 16
1.6 TAKING FIELD NOTES 18 DAILY INFORMATION 19 LITHOLOGIC LOGS 19
WELLDRILLING 22 WELL COMPLETION 24 PUMPING TESTS 25 WATER-QUALITY
MEASUREMENTS 27 1.7 GROUNDWATER USE 29 1.8 GROUNDWATER PLANNING 30
SOURCE-WATER PROTECTION STUDIES 31 1.9 SUMMARY 35 CHAPTER 2. THE GEOLOGY
OF HYDROGEOLOGY 37 2.1 GEOLOGIE PROPERTIES OF IGNEOUS ROCKS 38 EXTRUSIVE
ROCKS 38 ANDESITE 42 BASALT 46 INTRUSIVE ROCKS 49 2.2 GEOLOGIE
PROPERTIES OF METAMORPHIC ROCKS 55 PLATE TECTONIC SETTINGS OF
METAMORPHIC ROCKS 57 2.3 GEOLOGIE PROPERTIES OF SEDIMENTARY ROCKS 59
WEATHERING 61 TRANSPORT OF SEDIMENT AND DEPOSITIONAL ENVIRONMENTS 64
STRATIGRAPHY 67 CONTENTS 2.4 STRUCTURAL GEOLOGY 68 STRIKEANDDIP 69 FOLD
GEOMETRY 73 FAULTING 74 OTHER OBSERVATIONS IN STRUCTURES 78 STRUCTURAL
EFFECTS IN KARST AREAS 79 2.5 GEOLOGICTIME 84 2.6 USING GEOLOGIE
INFORMATION 87 CHAPTER3. AQUIFER PROPERTIES 91 3.1 FROM THE SURFACE TO
THE WATER TABLE 91 3.2 POROSITY AND AQUIFER STORAGE 94 POROES ITY 94
STORATIVITY 101 3.3 MOVEMENT OF FLUIDS THROUGH EARTH MATERIALS 104
TRANSMISSIVITY 110 3.4 AQUIFER CONCEPTS 111 UNCONFINED AQUIFERS 113
CONFINED AND ARTESIAN AQUIFER 114 CONFINING LAYERS 116 HYDROSTRATIGRAPHY
116 3.5 BOUNDARY CONCEPTS 117 HOMOGENEITY AND ISOTROPY 119 3.6 SPRINGS
120 3.7 SUMMARY 122 CHAPTER 4. BASIC GEOPHYSICS OF THE SHALLOW
SUBSURFACE 125 4.1 COMMON TARGETS FOR SHALLOW GEOPHYSICAL INVESTIGATION
126 4.2 APPROACHES TO SHALLOW SUBSURFACE INVESTIGATIONS 126 4.3 OVERVIEW
OF GEOPHYSICAL TECHNIQUES 127 METHODS 127 LIMITATIONS 127 4.4 MATCHING
GEOPHYSICAL METHODS TO APPLICATIONS 129 4.5 GEOPHYSICAL SURVEY PLANNING
130 4.6 SEISMICS 131 BASIC PRINCIPLES 131 REFRACTION SURVEYING 140
REFIECTION SURVEYING 143 4.7 SURFACEWAVE METHODS 148 4.8 ELECTRICAL 151
BASIC PRINCIPLES AND UNITS 151 RESISTIVITY 152 INDUCED POLARIZATION (IP)
162 SPONTANEOUS POTENTIAL (SP) 163 TELLURIC AND MAGNETOTELLURIC METHODS
164 ELECTROMAGNETIC (EM) TECHNIQUES 165 CHAPTER 5. GROUNDWATER FLOW 173
5.1 GROUNDWATER MOVEMENT 173 DARCY S LAW 173 HYDRAULIC HEAD 176
HYDRAULIC HEAD AND DARCY S LAW 179 5.2 FLOWNETS 183 VERTICAL GROUNDWATER
FLOW 188 GAINING AND LOSING SYSTEMS 189 REFRACTION OF GROUNDWATER FLOW
191 5.3 LEVEL MEASUREMENTS IN GROUNDWATER MONITORING WELLS 192 DEFINING
LEVEL MEASUREMENTS 194 ACCESS TO WELLS 197 MEASURING POINTS 200
WATER-IEVEL DEVICES 201 PRACTICAL DESIGN OF LEVEL-MEASUREMENT DEVICES
211 OTHER PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS 215 SUMRNARY OF LEVEL-MEASUREMENT
METHODS 220 5.4 MISINTERPRETATION OF WATER-LEVEL DATA 222 SHALLOW AND
DEEP WELLS 223 SHORT VERSUS LONG SCREEN LENGTHS 227 COMBINING DIFFERENT
AQUIFERS 228 5.5 SUMMARY 229 CHAPTER6. GROUNDWATER/SURFACE-WATER
INTERACTION 231 6.1 FLUVIAL PIAIN 232 CHANNEL ORIENTATION AND
GROUNDWATER/SURFACE-WATER EXCHANGE 234 6.2 HYPORHEIC ZONE 236 CHANNEL
GEOMORPHOLOGY AND STREAM CONNECTIVITY 237 6.3 STREAM HEALTH 240 6.4
FIELD METHODS TO DETERMINE GROUNDWATER/SURFACE-WATER EXCHANGE 242 STREAM
GAUGING 243 PARSHALL FLUMES 249 CREST-STAGE GAUGE 251 MINLPIEZOMETERS
253 SEEPAGE METERS 260 TEMPERATURE STUDIES 265 THERMAL PROPERTIES 266
FIELD EQULPMENT 272 TRACER STUDIES 273 CHEMICAL MASS BALANCE 280 6.5
SUMMARY 282 CHAPTER 7. WATER CHEMISTRY SAMPLING 287 7.1 HAVE A PLAN 287
QUALITY ASSURANCE 289 WHAT ARE YOU SAMPLING FOR? 290 MAKE A CHECKLIST
291 7.2 COLLECTLNG GROUNDWATER SAMPLES 292 SAMPLE RETRIEVAL 292 PASSIVE
SAMPLING 293 FILTRATION, PRESERVATION, AND LABELING 294 CHAIN OF CUSTODY
297 CLEANING AND DECONTAMINATION 297 7.3 FIELD MEASUREMENTS 298 PH AND
TEMPERATURE 298 VIII CONTENTS SPECIFIC CONDUCTANCE 300 DISSOLVED OXYGEN
AND REDOX STATE 303 ALKALINITY 304 TURBIDITY AND TOTAL SUSPENDED SOLIDS
307 7.4 LABORATORY ANALYSES 307 DISSOLVED METALS 307 ANIONS 308 ORGANIC
COMPOUNDS 308 TOTAL DISSOLVED SOLIDS 309 OTHER TYPES OF ANALYSES 310 7.5
INTERPRETING LAB RESULTS 312 DATA VALLDATION 312 CHARGE BALANCE 314
SPECIATION OF DISSOLVED INORGANIC CARBON 315 HARDNESS AND SODIUM
ADSORPTION RATIO 316 7.6 TIPS ON REPORTING DATA 317 7.7 SUMMARY 319
CHAPTER 8. DRILLING AND WELL COMPLETION 321 8.1 GETTING ALONG WITH
DRILLERS 321 8.2 RIG SAFETY 324 SUMRNARY OF SAFETY POINTS 328 OTHER
CONSIDERATIONS 329 8.3 DRILLING METHODS 330 CABLE-TOOL METHOD 331
FORWARD (DIRECT) ROTARY METHOD 335 REVERSE CIRCULATION DRILLING 341
CASING ADVANCEMENT DRILLING METHODS 344 AUGER DRILLING 346 DIRECT-PUSH
METHODS 347 SONIC OR ROTASONIC DRILLING 351 MINI-SONIC 351 CONE
PENETROMETER TESTING (CPT) 351 HORIZONTAL DRILLING 353 8.4 HOW TO LOG A
DRILL HOLE 354 DESCRIBING THE CUTTINGS 358 LAG TIME 358 HOW MUCH WATER
IS BEING MADE AND WHERE DID IT COME FROM? 359 8.5 MONITORING-WELL
CONSTRUCTION 360 OBJECTIVES OF A GROUNDWATER MONITORING PROGRAM 361
INSTALLING A GROUNDWATER MONITORING WELL 363 WELL COMPLETION MATERIALS
369 WELL DEVELOPMENT 371 COMPLETION OF MULTILEVEL MONITORING WELLS 373
8.6 PRODUCTION-WELL COMPLETION 374 SIEVE ANALYSIS 375 WELL SCREEN
CRITERIA 378 SCREEN ENTRANCE VELOCITY 382 WELL COMPLETION AND
DEVELOPMENT 385 8.7 WATER WITCHING 390 8.8 SUMMARY 391 CHAPTER 9.
PUMPING TESTS 395 9.1 WHY PUMPING TESTS? 395 9.2 PUMPING-TEST DESIGN 396
GEOLOGIE CONDITIONS 397 DISTANCE-DEPTH REQUIREMENTS OF OBSERVATION WELLS
400 9.3 STEP-DRAWDOWN TESTS 404 WELL EFFICIENCY 405 LAMINAR VERSUS
TURBULENT FLOW 406 9.4 SETTING UP AND RUNNING A PUMPING TEST 411 POWER
SUPPLY AND PUMPS 412 DATA LOGGERS, TRANSDUCERS, AND WELL SENTINELS 418
E-TAPES 424 DISCHARGE SYSTEM 425 DUCT TAPE 427 SETUP PROCEDURE 427
FREQUENCY OF MANUAL READINGS 431 SAFETY ISSUES 432 9.5 THINGS THAT
AFFECT PUMPING TEST RESULTS 433 WEATHER AND BAROMETRIC CHANGES 433 OTHEI
APPARENT SOURCES AND SINKS 433 9.6 SUMMARY 435 CHAPTER 10. AQUIFER
HYDRAULICS 437 10.1 WELLS 438 CONE OF DEPRESSION 438 COMPARISON OF
CONFINED AND UNCONFINED AQUIFERS 441 10.2 TRADITIONAL PUMPING-TEST
ANALYTICAL METHODS 443 COOPER-JACOB STRAIGHT-LINE PLOT 448 SINGLE-WELL
TESTS 455 CASING STORAGE 456 LEAKY-CONFINED AND SEMICONFINED AQUIFERS
458 SPECIFIC YIELD AND VERTICAL HYDRAULIC CONDUETIVITY FROM UNCONFINED
AQUIFER TESTS 463 DISTANCE-DRAWDOWN RELATIONSHIPS 470 PREDICTIONS OF
DISTANCE-DRAWDOWN FROM TIME-DRAWDOWN 472 RECOVERY PLOTS 474 10.3
SPECIFIC CAPACITY 477 10.4 WELL INTERFERENCE AND BOUNDARY CONDITIONS 479
AQUIFER BOUNDARY CONDITIONS 481 IMAGE WELL THEORY 483 10.5 PARTIAL
PENETRATION OF WELLS AND ESTIMATES OF SATURATED THICKNESS 484 ESTIMATES
OF THE SATURATED THICKNESS IN UNCONFINED AQUIFERS 486 10.6 FRACTURE-FLOW
ANALYSIS 492 PUMPING TESTS IN FLOWING WELLS 495 10.7 SUMMARY 498 CHAPTER
11. SLUGTESTING 501 11.1 FIELD METHODOLOGY 502 HOW TO MAKE A SLUG 504
CONTENTS PERFORMING A SLUG FEST 505 SLUG TESTS USING WELL SENTINELS 508
11.2 COMMON ERRORS ASSOCIATED WITH PERFORMING SLUG TESTS 509 MONITORING
WEIL COMPLETION ISSUES 509 EQUIPMENT PROBLEMS 511 11.3 ANALYZING SLUG
TESTS*THE DAMPED CASE 512 HVORSLEV METHOD 513 BOUWER AND RICE SLUG TEST
516 COMMON ERRORS MADE IN ANALYZING SLUG TEST DATA 523 HOW TO ANALYZE
SLUG TESTS FOR BOTH DAMPED METHODS FROM A SINGLE PLOT 524 11.4 ANALYZING
SLUG TESTS*UNDERDAMPED CASE 525 NATURE OF UNDERDAMPED BEHAVIOR 526
EFFECTIVE STRESS AND ELASTIC BEHAVIOR 529 VAN DER KAMP METHOD 533 KIPP
METHOD 535 METHODOLOGY 537 COMPARISON OF TWO METHODS AND DISCUSSION OF
STORATIVITY 542 11.5 OTHER OBSERVATIONS 543 CHAPTER 12. VADOSE ZONE
HYDROGEOLOGY: BASIC PRINCIPLES, CHARACTERIZATION, AND MONITORING 547
12.1 ENERGY STATUS OF PORE WATER 548 12.2 WATER CONTENT 551 12.3
SOIL-WATER RETENTION CURVES 551 12.4 DARCY S EQUATION AND UNSATURATED
FLOW PARAMETERS 554 HYDRAULIC GRADIENT 554 UNSATURATED HYDRAULIC
CONDUCTIVITY 555 12.5 SOIL-WATER BUDGET 559 INFILTRATION 559 EVAPORATION
AND TRANSPIRATION 562 12.6 WATER STORAGE AND DEEP PERCOLATION 565 12.7
PHYSICAL METHODS 565 SOIL LYSIMETERS 565 WATER BALANCE 566 DARCY FLUX IN
THE VADOSE ZONE 566 NUMERICAL MODEIS OF SOIL-WATER FLOW 566 CHEMICAL
METHODS IN THE VADOSE ZONE 567 12.8 CHARACTERIZING HYDRAULIC PROPERTIES
569 SOIL-WATER CHARACTERISTIC CURVE 569 SATURATED HYDRAULIC CONDUCTIVITY
571 UNSATURATED HYDRAULIC CONDUCTIVITY 577 ESTIMATING UNSATURATED
HYDRAULIC CONDUCTIVITY 579 12.9 VADOSE ZONE MONITORING 583 PRESSURE HEAD
SOIL-WATER POTENTIAL 583 INDIRECT METHODS 586 MOISTURE CONTENT 589 SOIL
GAS SAMPLING AND MONITORING 592 PORE LIQUID SAMPLING 593 12.10 SUMMARY
597 CHAPTER13. KARST HYDROGEOLOGY 603 13.1 INTRODUCTION 603 13.2 KARST
TYPES 606 COVERED AND EXPOSED KARST 606 CONE AND TOWER KARST 607 COCKPIT
KARST 608 PAVEMENT KARST 608 FLUVIOKARST 608 SINKHOLE KARST 609 KARST IN
THE LITERATURE 609 13.3 CARBONATE ROCKS 610 LIMESTONE 611 FOLK
CLASSIFICATION 612 DUNHAM CLASSIFICATION SCHEME 613 DOLOMITE 614 13.4
RECHARGE AREAS 615 13.5 SURFACE KARST FEATURES 616 SINKHOLES 616 SINKING
STREAMS 620 KARST VALLEYS 620 KARREN 622 EPIKARST 623 KARST SPRINGS 625
13.6 CAVES 627 TWENTIETH CENTURY THEORIES ON CAVE FORMATION 629
CONTROLLING FACTORS IN CAVE FORMATION 629 CAVE PASSAGEWAYS 630
SPELEOTHEMS 631 13.7 THE KARST AQUIFER 633 13.8 LAND USE PROBLEMS IN
KART 636 HUMAN IMPACT ON KARST GROUNDWATER RESOURCES 636 13.9
INVESTIGATIVE METHODS IN KARST 638 GROUNDWATER DYE TRACING 638
HYDROGRAPHS AND CHEMOGRAPHS 639 GEOPHYSICAL TECHNIQUES 641 ELECTRICAL
SURVEY 641 FREQUENCY DOMAIN ELECTROMAGNETIC SURVEY 641 GROUND
PENETRATING RADAR 641 GRAVITY SURVEY 641 SEISMIC SURVEY 642 13.10
SUMMARY 643 CHAPTER14. TRACER TESTS*GENERAL 651 14.1 TRACER TEST
OBJECTIVES 652 14.2 TRACER MATERIAL 652 14.3 DESIGN AND COMPLETION OF
TRACER TEST 656 CONCEPTUAL DESIGN 657 SELECTION OF THE INITIAL MASS OF
THE TRACER OR ITS CONCENTRATION 658 POINT-SOURCE INFRASTRUCTURE 662
OBSERVATION WELLS 668 XII CONTENTS SAMPLING SCHEDULE 668 MONITORING 670
EQUIPMENT 671 14.4 COMMON ERRORS 673 CHAPTER15. TRACER TESTS*DYE 675
15.1 UTILITY OF GROUNDWATERTRACING 675 15.2 CHARACTERISTICS OF IDEAL
TRACING AGENTS 679 15.3 COMMON MISCONCEPTIONS ABOUT TRACER DYES 679 15.4
DYE NOMENCLATURE AND PROPERTIES 681 15.5 DESIGNING A DYE TRACING STUDY
686 15.6 SAMPLING AND ANALYSIS FOR DYES 689 15.7 DETECTION LIMITS FOR
TRACER DYES 695 15.8 DETERMINING DYE QUANTITIES 696 15.9 SUMMARY 698
APPENDIX A. UNIT CONVERSIONSTABLES 699 APPENDIX B. RELATIONSHIP OF WATER
DENSITY AND VISCOSITY TOTEMPERATURE 707 APPENDIXE. PERIODICTABLE 709
APPENDIX D. VALUES OF W{U) AND UFORTHETHEIS NONEQUILIBRIUM EQUATION 711
APPENDIX E. SOURCES OF CAVE AND KARST INFORMATION 713 APPENDIX F. WATER
QUALITY PARAMETERS AND THEIR SIGNIFICANCE 719 GLOSSARY 723 INDEX 741
|
adam_txt |
PREFACE XIII CHAPTERI. FIELD HYDROGEOLOGY 1 1.1 HYDROLOGIE CYCLE 2 1.2
WATER-BUDGET ANALYSIS 4 1.3 WATER-BUDGET MYTH 10 SUSTAINABILITY 11 WATER
AS A COMMODITY 12 CHANGES IN FLOW SYSTEMS 13 1.4 SOURCES OF INFORMATION
ON HYDROGEOLOGY 14 1.5 SITE LOCATION FOR HYDROGEOLOGIE INVESTIGATIONS 16
1.6 TAKING FIELD NOTES 18 DAILY INFORMATION 19 LITHOLOGIC LOGS 19
WELLDRILLING 22 WELL COMPLETION 24 PUMPING TESTS 25 WATER-QUALITY
MEASUREMENTS 27 1.7 GROUNDWATER USE 29 1.8 GROUNDWATER PLANNING 30
SOURCE-WATER PROTECTION STUDIES 31 1.9 SUMMARY 35 CHAPTER 2. THE GEOLOGY
OF HYDROGEOLOGY 37 2.1 GEOLOGIE PROPERTIES OF IGNEOUS ROCKS 38 EXTRUSIVE
ROCKS 38 ANDESITE 42 BASALT 46 INTRUSIVE ROCKS 49 2.2 GEOLOGIE
PROPERTIES OF METAMORPHIC ROCKS 55 PLATE TECTONIC SETTINGS OF
METAMORPHIC ROCKS 57 2.3 GEOLOGIE PROPERTIES OF SEDIMENTARY ROCKS 59
WEATHERING 61 TRANSPORT OF SEDIMENT AND DEPOSITIONAL ENVIRONMENTS 64
STRATIGRAPHY 67 CONTENTS 2.4 STRUCTURAL GEOLOGY 68 STRIKEANDDIP 69 FOLD
GEOMETRY 73 FAULTING 74 OTHER OBSERVATIONS IN STRUCTURES 78 STRUCTURAL
EFFECTS IN KARST AREAS 79 2.5 GEOLOGICTIME 84 2.6 USING GEOLOGIE
INFORMATION 87 CHAPTER3. AQUIFER PROPERTIES 91 3.1 FROM THE SURFACE TO
THE WATER TABLE 91 3.2 POROSITY AND AQUIFER STORAGE 94 POROES ITY 94
STORATIVITY 101 3.3 MOVEMENT OF FLUIDS THROUGH EARTH MATERIALS 104
TRANSMISSIVITY 110 3.4 AQUIFER CONCEPTS 111 UNCONFINED AQUIFERS 113
CONFINED AND ARTESIAN AQUIFER 114 CONFINING LAYERS 116 HYDROSTRATIGRAPHY
116 3.5 BOUNDARY CONCEPTS 117 HOMOGENEITY AND ISOTROPY 119 3.6 SPRINGS
120 3.7 SUMMARY 122 CHAPTER 4. BASIC GEOPHYSICS OF THE SHALLOW
SUBSURFACE 125 4.1 COMMON TARGETS FOR SHALLOW GEOPHYSICAL INVESTIGATION
126 4.2 APPROACHES TO SHALLOW SUBSURFACE INVESTIGATIONS 126 4.3 OVERVIEW
OF GEOPHYSICAL TECHNIQUES 127 METHODS 127 LIMITATIONS 127 4.4 MATCHING
GEOPHYSICAL METHODS TO APPLICATIONS 129 4.5 GEOPHYSICAL SURVEY PLANNING
130 4.6 SEISMICS 131 BASIC PRINCIPLES 131 REFRACTION SURVEYING 140
REFIECTION SURVEYING 143 4.7 SURFACEWAVE METHODS 148 4.8 ELECTRICAL 151
BASIC PRINCIPLES AND UNITS 151 RESISTIVITY 152 INDUCED POLARIZATION (IP)
162 SPONTANEOUS POTENTIAL (SP) 163 TELLURIC AND MAGNETOTELLURIC METHODS
164 ELECTROMAGNETIC (EM) TECHNIQUES 165 CHAPTER 5. GROUNDWATER FLOW 173
5.1 GROUNDWATER MOVEMENT 173 DARCY'S LAW 173 HYDRAULIC HEAD 176
HYDRAULIC HEAD AND DARCY'S LAW 179 5.2 FLOWNETS 183 VERTICAL GROUNDWATER
FLOW 188 GAINING AND LOSING SYSTEMS 189 REFRACTION OF GROUNDWATER FLOW
191 5.3 LEVEL MEASUREMENTS IN GROUNDWATER MONITORING WELLS 192 DEFINING
LEVEL MEASUREMENTS 194 ACCESS TO WELLS 197 MEASURING POINTS 200
WATER-IEVEL DEVICES 201 PRACTICAL DESIGN OF LEVEL-MEASUREMENT DEVICES
211 OTHER PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS 215 SUMRNARY OF LEVEL-MEASUREMENT
METHODS 220 5.4 MISINTERPRETATION OF WATER-LEVEL DATA 222 SHALLOW AND
DEEP WELLS 223 SHORT VERSUS LONG SCREEN LENGTHS 227 COMBINING DIFFERENT
AQUIFERS 228 5.5 SUMMARY 229 CHAPTER6. GROUNDWATER/SURFACE-WATER
INTERACTION 231 6.1 FLUVIAL PIAIN 232 CHANNEL ORIENTATION AND
GROUNDWATER/SURFACE-WATER EXCHANGE 234 6.2 HYPORHEIC ZONE 236 CHANNEL
GEOMORPHOLOGY AND STREAM CONNECTIVITY 237 6.3 STREAM HEALTH 240 6.4
FIELD METHODS TO DETERMINE GROUNDWATER/SURFACE-WATER EXCHANGE 242 STREAM
GAUGING 243 PARSHALL FLUMES 249 CREST-STAGE GAUGE 251 MINLPIEZOMETERS
253 SEEPAGE METERS 260 TEMPERATURE STUDIES 265 THERMAL PROPERTIES 266
FIELD EQULPMENT 272 TRACER STUDIES 273 CHEMICAL MASS BALANCE 280 6.5
SUMMARY 282 CHAPTER 7. WATER CHEMISTRY SAMPLING 287 7.1 HAVE A PLAN 287
QUALITY ASSURANCE 289 WHAT ARE YOU SAMPLING FOR? 290 MAKE A CHECKLIST
291 7.2 COLLECTLNG GROUNDWATER SAMPLES 292 SAMPLE RETRIEVAL 292 PASSIVE
SAMPLING 293 FILTRATION, PRESERVATION, AND LABELING 294 CHAIN OF CUSTODY
297 CLEANING AND DECONTAMINATION 297 7.3 FIELD MEASUREMENTS 298 PH AND
TEMPERATURE 298 VIII CONTENTS SPECIFIC CONDUCTANCE 300 DISSOLVED OXYGEN
AND REDOX STATE 303 ALKALINITY 304 TURBIDITY AND TOTAL SUSPENDED SOLIDS
307 7.4 LABORATORY ANALYSES 307 DISSOLVED METALS 307 ANIONS 308 ORGANIC
COMPOUNDS 308 TOTAL DISSOLVED SOLIDS 309 OTHER TYPES OF ANALYSES 310 7.5
INTERPRETING LAB RESULTS 312 DATA VALLDATION 312 CHARGE BALANCE 314
SPECIATION OF DISSOLVED INORGANIC CARBON 315 HARDNESS AND SODIUM
ADSORPTION RATIO 316 7.6 TIPS ON REPORTING DATA 317 7.7 SUMMARY 319
CHAPTER 8. DRILLING AND WELL COMPLETION 321 8.1 GETTING ALONG WITH
DRILLERS 321 8.2 RIG SAFETY 324 SUMRNARY OF SAFETY POINTS 328 OTHER
CONSIDERATIONS 329 8.3 DRILLING METHODS 330 CABLE-TOOL METHOD 331
FORWARD (DIRECT) ROTARY METHOD 335 REVERSE CIRCULATION DRILLING 341
CASING ADVANCEMENT DRILLING METHODS 344 AUGER DRILLING 346 DIRECT-PUSH
METHODS 347 SONIC OR ROTASONIC DRILLING 351 MINI-SONIC 351 CONE
PENETROMETER TESTING (CPT) 351 HORIZONTAL DRILLING 353 8.4 HOW TO LOG A
DRILL HOLE 354 DESCRIBING THE CUTTINGS 358 LAG TIME 358 HOW MUCH WATER
IS BEING MADE AND WHERE DID IT COME FROM? 359 8.5 MONITORING-WELL
CONSTRUCTION 360 OBJECTIVES OF A GROUNDWATER MONITORING PROGRAM 361
INSTALLING A GROUNDWATER MONITORING WELL 363 WELL COMPLETION MATERIALS
369 WELL DEVELOPMENT 371 COMPLETION OF MULTILEVEL MONITORING WELLS 373
8.6 PRODUCTION-WELL COMPLETION 374 SIEVE ANALYSIS 375 WELL SCREEN
CRITERIA 378 SCREEN ENTRANCE VELOCITY 382 WELL COMPLETION AND
DEVELOPMENT 385 8.7 WATER WITCHING 390 8.8 SUMMARY 391 CHAPTER 9.
PUMPING TESTS 395 9.1 WHY PUMPING TESTS? 395 9.2 PUMPING-TEST DESIGN 396
GEOLOGIE CONDITIONS 397 DISTANCE-DEPTH REQUIREMENTS OF OBSERVATION WELLS
400 9.3 STEP-DRAWDOWN TESTS 404 WELL EFFICIENCY 405 LAMINAR VERSUS
TURBULENT FLOW 406 9.4 SETTING UP AND RUNNING A PUMPING TEST 411 POWER
SUPPLY AND PUMPS 412 DATA LOGGERS, TRANSDUCERS, AND WELL SENTINELS 418
E-TAPES 424 DISCHARGE SYSTEM 425 DUCT TAPE 427 SETUP PROCEDURE 427
FREQUENCY OF MANUAL READINGS 431 SAFETY ISSUES 432 9.5 THINGS THAT
AFFECT PUMPING TEST RESULTS 433 WEATHER AND BAROMETRIC CHANGES 433 OTHEI
APPARENT SOURCES AND SINKS 433 9.6 SUMMARY 435 CHAPTER 10. AQUIFER
HYDRAULICS 437 10.1 WELLS 438 CONE OF DEPRESSION 438 COMPARISON OF
CONFINED AND UNCONFINED AQUIFERS 441 10.2 TRADITIONAL PUMPING-TEST
ANALYTICAL METHODS 443 COOPER-JACOB STRAIGHT-LINE PLOT 448 SINGLE-WELL
TESTS 455 CASING STORAGE 456 LEAKY-CONFINED AND SEMICONFINED AQUIFERS
458 SPECIFIC YIELD AND VERTICAL HYDRAULIC CONDUETIVITY FROM UNCONFINED
AQUIFER TESTS 463 DISTANCE-DRAWDOWN RELATIONSHIPS 470 PREDICTIONS OF
DISTANCE-DRAWDOWN FROM TIME-DRAWDOWN 472 RECOVERY PLOTS 474 10.3
SPECIFIC CAPACITY 477 10.4 WELL INTERFERENCE AND BOUNDARY CONDITIONS 479
AQUIFER BOUNDARY CONDITIONS 481 IMAGE WELL THEORY 483 10.5 PARTIAL
PENETRATION OF WELLS AND ESTIMATES OF SATURATED THICKNESS 484 ESTIMATES
OF THE SATURATED THICKNESS IN UNCONFINED AQUIFERS 486 10.6 FRACTURE-FLOW
ANALYSIS 492 PUMPING TESTS IN FLOWING WELLS 495 10.7 SUMMARY 498 CHAPTER
11. SLUGTESTING 501 11.1 FIELD METHODOLOGY 502 HOW TO MAKE A SLUG 504
CONTENTS PERFORMING A SLUG FEST 505 SLUG TESTS USING WELL SENTINELS 508
11.2 COMMON ERRORS ASSOCIATED WITH PERFORMING SLUG TESTS 509 MONITORING
WEIL COMPLETION ISSUES 509 EQUIPMENT PROBLEMS 511 11.3 ANALYZING SLUG
TESTS*THE DAMPED CASE 512 HVORSLEV METHOD 513 BOUWER AND RICE SLUG TEST
516 COMMON ERRORS MADE IN ANALYZING SLUG TEST DATA 523 HOW TO ANALYZE
SLUG TESTS FOR BOTH DAMPED METHODS FROM A SINGLE PLOT 524 11.4 ANALYZING
SLUG TESTS*UNDERDAMPED CASE 525 NATURE OF UNDERDAMPED BEHAVIOR 526
EFFECTIVE STRESS AND ELASTIC BEHAVIOR 529 VAN DER KAMP METHOD 533 KIPP
METHOD 535 METHODOLOGY 537 COMPARISON OF TWO METHODS AND DISCUSSION OF
STORATIVITY 542 11.5 OTHER OBSERVATIONS 543 CHAPTER 12. VADOSE ZONE
HYDROGEOLOGY: BASIC PRINCIPLES, CHARACTERIZATION, AND MONITORING 547
12.1 ENERGY STATUS OF PORE WATER 548 12.2 WATER CONTENT 551 12.3
SOIL-WATER RETENTION CURVES 551 12.4 DARCY'S EQUATION AND UNSATURATED
FLOW PARAMETERS 554 HYDRAULIC GRADIENT 554 UNSATURATED HYDRAULIC
CONDUCTIVITY 555 12.5 SOIL-WATER BUDGET 559 INFILTRATION 559 EVAPORATION
AND TRANSPIRATION 562 12.6 WATER STORAGE AND DEEP PERCOLATION 565 12.7
PHYSICAL METHODS 565 SOIL LYSIMETERS 565 WATER BALANCE 566 DARCY FLUX IN
THE VADOSE ZONE 566 NUMERICAL MODEIS OF SOIL-WATER FLOW 566 CHEMICAL
METHODS IN THE VADOSE ZONE 567 12.8 CHARACTERIZING HYDRAULIC PROPERTIES
569 SOIL-WATER CHARACTERISTIC CURVE 569 SATURATED HYDRAULIC CONDUCTIVITY
571 UNSATURATED HYDRAULIC CONDUCTIVITY 577 ESTIMATING UNSATURATED
HYDRAULIC CONDUCTIVITY 579 12.9 VADOSE ZONE MONITORING 583 PRESSURE HEAD
SOIL-WATER POTENTIAL 583 INDIRECT METHODS 586 MOISTURE CONTENT 589 SOIL
GAS SAMPLING AND MONITORING 592 PORE LIQUID SAMPLING 593 12.10 SUMMARY
597 CHAPTER13. KARST HYDROGEOLOGY 603 13.1 INTRODUCTION 603 13.2 KARST
TYPES 606 COVERED AND EXPOSED KARST 606 CONE AND TOWER KARST 607 COCKPIT
KARST 608 PAVEMENT KARST 608 FLUVIOKARST 608 SINKHOLE KARST 609 KARST IN
THE LITERATURE 609 13.3 CARBONATE ROCKS 610 LIMESTONE 611 FOLK
CLASSIFICATION 612 DUNHAM CLASSIFICATION SCHEME 613 DOLOMITE 614 13.4
RECHARGE AREAS 615 13.5 SURFACE KARST FEATURES 616 SINKHOLES 616 SINKING
STREAMS 620 KARST VALLEYS 620 KARREN 622 EPIKARST 623 KARST SPRINGS 625
13.6 CAVES 627 TWENTIETH CENTURY THEORIES ON CAVE FORMATION 629
CONTROLLING FACTORS IN CAVE FORMATION 629 CAVE PASSAGEWAYS 630
SPELEOTHEMS 631 13.7 THE KARST AQUIFER 633 13.8 LAND USE PROBLEMS IN
KART 636 HUMAN IMPACT ON KARST GROUNDWATER RESOURCES 636 13.9
INVESTIGATIVE METHODS IN KARST 638 GROUNDWATER DYE TRACING 638
HYDROGRAPHS AND CHEMOGRAPHS 639 GEOPHYSICAL TECHNIQUES 641 ELECTRICAL
SURVEY 641 FREQUENCY DOMAIN ELECTROMAGNETIC SURVEY 641 GROUND
PENETRATING RADAR 641 GRAVITY SURVEY 641 SEISMIC SURVEY 642 13.10
SUMMARY 643 CHAPTER14. TRACER TESTS*GENERAL 651 14.1 TRACER TEST
OBJECTIVES 652 14.2 TRACER MATERIAL 652 14.3 DESIGN AND COMPLETION OF
TRACER TEST 656 CONCEPTUAL DESIGN 657 SELECTION OF THE INITIAL MASS OF
THE TRACER OR ITS CONCENTRATION 658 POINT-SOURCE INFRASTRUCTURE 662
OBSERVATION WELLS 668 XII CONTENTS SAMPLING SCHEDULE 668 MONITORING 670
EQUIPMENT 671 14.4 COMMON ERRORS 673 CHAPTER15. TRACER TESTS*DYE 675
15.1 UTILITY OF GROUNDWATERTRACING 675 15.2 CHARACTERISTICS OF IDEAL
TRACING AGENTS 679 15.3 COMMON MISCONCEPTIONS ABOUT TRACER DYES 679 15.4
DYE NOMENCLATURE AND PROPERTIES 681 15.5 DESIGNING A DYE TRACING STUDY
686 15.6 SAMPLING AND ANALYSIS FOR DYES 689 15.7 DETECTION LIMITS FOR
TRACER DYES 695 15.8 DETERMINING DYE QUANTITIES 696 15.9 SUMMARY 698
APPENDIX A. UNIT CONVERSIONSTABLES 699 APPENDIX B. RELATIONSHIP OF WATER
DENSITY AND VISCOSITY TOTEMPERATURE 707 APPENDIXE. PERIODICTABLE 709
APPENDIX D. VALUES OF W{U) AND UFORTHETHEIS NONEQUILIBRIUM EQUATION 711
APPENDIX E. SOURCES OF CAVE AND KARST INFORMATION 713 APPENDIX F. WATER
QUALITY PARAMETERS AND THEIR SIGNIFICANCE 719 GLOSSARY 723 INDEX 741 |
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author | Weight, Willis D. |
author_GND | (DE-588)13583726X |
author_facet | Weight, Willis D. |
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building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV023278536 |
callnumber-first | G - Geography, Anthropology, Recreation |
callnumber-label | GB1003 |
callnumber-raw | GB1003.2 |
callnumber-search | GB1003.2 |
callnumber-sort | GB 41003.2 |
callnumber-subject | GB - Physical Geography |
classification_rvk | RB 10354 TI 8000 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)182573513 (DE-599)BVBBV023278536 |
dewey-full | 551.49 |
dewey-hundreds | 500 - Natural sciences and mathematics |
dewey-ones | 551 - Geology, hydrology, meteorology |
dewey-raw | 551.49 |
dewey-search | 551.49 |
dewey-sort | 3551.49 |
dewey-tens | 550 - Earth sciences |
discipline | Geologie / Paläontologie Geographie |
discipline_str_mv | Geologie / Paläontologie Geographie |
edition | 2. ed. |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV023278536 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T20:38:50Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T21:14:48Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 0071477497 9780071477499 |
language | English |
lccn | 2007047464 |
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oclc_num | 182573513 |
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physical | XVI, 751 S. Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. 24 cm |
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spelling | Weight, Willis D. Verfasser (DE-588)13583726X aut Hydrogeology field manual Willis D. Weight 2. ed. New York [u.a.] McGraw-Hill 2008 XVI, 751 S. Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. 24 cm txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier 1. Aufl. u.d.T: Weight, Willis D.: Manual of applied field hydrogeology. - 3. Aufl. u.d.T: Weight, Willis D.: Practical hydrogeology Includes bibliographical references and index Hydrogeology Angewandte Hydrogeologie (DE-588)4142439-6 gnd rswk-swf Angewandte Hydrogeologie (DE-588)4142439-6 s DE-604 http://www.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy0814/2007047464-b.html Contributor biographical information http://www.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy0814/2007047464-d.html Publisher description http://www.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy0814/2007047464-t.html Table of contents only OEBV Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016463378&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Weight, Willis D. Hydrogeology field manual Hydrogeology Angewandte Hydrogeologie (DE-588)4142439-6 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4142439-6 |
title | Hydrogeology field manual |
title_auth | Hydrogeology field manual |
title_exact_search | Hydrogeology field manual |
title_exact_search_txtP | Hydrogeology field manual |
title_full | Hydrogeology field manual Willis D. Weight |
title_fullStr | Hydrogeology field manual Willis D. Weight |
title_full_unstemmed | Hydrogeology field manual Willis D. Weight |
title_short | Hydrogeology field manual |
title_sort | hydrogeology field manual |
topic | Hydrogeology Angewandte Hydrogeologie (DE-588)4142439-6 gnd |
topic_facet | Hydrogeology Angewandte Hydrogeologie |
url | http://www.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy0814/2007047464-b.html http://www.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy0814/2007047464-d.html http://www.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy0814/2007047464-t.html http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016463378&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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