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Learning about Water as a Resource

  1. Why is water an important resource?
  2. How is water distributed?
  3. Where does our water come from?
  4. How does water become polluted?
  5. How is water recycled in nature?
  6. What is ground water flow?
  7. Why is water special?

Next 8-14 Topics

Where does our water come from?

Photograph of an where water flows down hill

© Michael Collier

This is a view of the drainage pattern below Arizona's Grand Wash Cliffs in the Lake Mead National Recreation Area.

Everybody knows that water flows downhill. The reason is that the force of gravity pulls everything downward toward the center of the Earth. If a material is resting on a sloping surface, part of the force of gravity acts in the downslope direction. If that does not make sense, think about leaning a board against a wall at an angle and placing a brick on the board. You need to exert a force to keep the brick from sliding down the board. The steeper the board, the more force you have to exert to keep the brick from sliding. Groundwater flows from high areas to low areas also, but its motion is much more difficult to observe. Water in the pipes in homes can flow upward as well as downward, because the high pressure in the pipes is much greater than the force of gravity.

The source of almost all of the water supplies for human civilization is rainfall or melted snowfall. When rain falls on the land, it either runs off into streams and rivers or it soaks into the ground to become groundwater. The groundwater flows slowly underground, and eventually comes back out to the surface at the beds of lakes and rivers.

Photograph of a concrete chute spillway

© Tim McCabe, NRCS

Concrete chute spillway in a dam built as part of a watershed project for flood and erosion control.

Every stream or river drains a particular area of the land surface. The land area that is drained by a given river is called the watershed of that river. Watersheds are also called drainage basins. The imaginary line on the land surface that separates the watershed of one river from the watershed of another river is called a divide. Divides follow along the crests of hills and ridges. You can stand on a divide and pour a glass of water from one hand into one watershed and a glass of water from the other hand into another watershed! There are watersheds for groundwater as well as for surface water. Divides between groundwater drainage basins are usually in about the same place as divides between river drainage basins.

Most towns and cities get their water from their own watershed. In some places, especially in large cities, the demand for water is greater than the supply in the local watershed. Then water has to be transported from distant watersheds.

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Fossil of the skull of a saber-toothed cat, an extinct mammal that lived in the Pleistocene epoch. Albert Copley © Oklahoma University; Image Courtesy of the Earth Science World Image Bank.  Photo ID: hn81e5

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Last updated:July 23, 2008


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