Oscar E.
Meinzer's discussion of the occurrence of groundwater in the United States
(1923, The Occurrence of Ground Water in the U.S. with a Discussion of
Principles, USGS Water-Supply Paper 489) is a classic in the science of
groundwater, geology. It is an excellent reference for the broadest possible
view of the principles of the science. Meinzer’s work is abstracted and the key
points presented below.
Rocks as receptacles of water
All rocks
contain openings through which water will flow, especially near the
surface of the earth.
In some
cases, the rate of flow is almost immeasurable because these openings are so
minute or disconnected.
The size,
shape, and arrangement of the openings are highly variable.
Technically
the openings are called voids, pores, or interstices.
Secondary
openings may develop after rocks are formed.
This type
of opening is commonly larger and more linear, but not necessarily better
connected than the primary opening.
Secondary
openings include caves, tubes, fracture zones, and openings
along joints and faults.
Some
secondary openings develop as recrystallization or solution of original
material takes place.
Porosity of rocks
The porosity of rock is its property of containing open spaces and can be expressed as the ratio of the total volume of its pore spaces to its total bulk rock volume.
The porosity of rock is its property of containing open spaces and can be expressed as the ratio of the total volume of its pore spaces to its total bulk rock volume.
Thus, porosity is expressed as a percentage. If all
the pores are filled, the rock is saturated.
So porosity in the saturated zone is the percentage
of the total volume of the rock which contains water.
The photo
at right is a computer microtomograhy image showing the porosity of a sample
rock core.
Conditions affecting porosity in a sedimentary
deposit
1. The shape and arrangement of its constituent
particles
2. The degree of assortment of its particles
3. The cementation and compacting to which a rock is
subjected
4. The removal of mineral matter through solution
5. The fracturing of the rock, resulting in joints.
Sorting
Agents
that transport sediment as grains—or aggregates of grains or particles—tend to
sort them according to their size, shape, and specific
gravity (density).
Particle
size can vary greatly in a sedimentary deposit.
Good
sorting results in particles of approximately equal size, whether large or
small, throughout the sample.
Well-sorted
deposits lacking cement have high porosities.
Poorly
sorted deposits, mixtures of two or more particle sizes, have less porosity
than the same volume of well-sorted material.
Thus, a
glacial deposit that is a mixture of clay, boulders, and silt has a much lower
porosity than the same volume of well-sorted sand.
However,
porosity can change after the sediment is deposited.
Pores can
be filled with cement, thus reducing porosity. Porosity can be increased as the
solution removes some of the original material, a situation common in limestone
or dolomite terrains.
Hard
igneous or metamorphic rocks can develop porosity as they become fractured
under stress or as they weather in response to the wear and tear of the
elements.
Porosity of granular deposits
Granular
deposits consist of individual grains, or
aggregates of grains, which are deposited by the action of running
water or wind.
The percentage
of porosity (pore space) in a granular deposit is determined
largely by the way the particles come to rest and what happens to them during
compaction.
If we
assume the particles are spheres that come to rest with their centers above
each other along a vertical axis, the porosity of this arrangement would be
47.64 percent.
This
arrangement is highly unlikely as this condition is unstable.
However,
if the particles come to rest so that they are arranged in the most compact
manner possible, the porosity is reduced to 25.95 percent.
This
provides a starting point for the range of porosity possible in a granular
deposit which is well-sorted and in which the grains are well-rounded.
Of
course, it assumes that no cement exists in the pores. Any addition of cement
would reduce the porosity drastically.
Relation of porosity to the size
of grainsIf other
conditions are the same, a material will have the same porosity
regardless of whether it consists of all large or all small grains.
If the
particles are well-sorted, the porosity of a deposit which consists of 100
percent silt will be the same as a deposit which consists of 100 percent of the
same grain size of sand, providing their volumes are the same.
Relation of porosity to shape of
grains
The
shapes of individual grains can vary greatly.
The porosity
of a deposit consisting of angular grains is greater than the same volume of
well-rounded grains providing the sorting is the same in each case
(rarely the case).
Relation
of porosity to degree of assortment
It has
been noted that deposits consisting of mixtures of grains of different sizes,
or of pebbles and sand, will have lower porosities than equal volumes of
particles of the same size.
The
addition of a large rock to a sand deposit will reduce the total pores
considerably.
Solid
rock in the form of pebbles or boulders simply occupies spaces formerly
containing interstices.
A
mechanical analysis is commonly conducted to determine which grain sizes are
present in a sample and the percent of each.
The divisions between gravel, sand, and silt are
arbitrary, and meant for classification only.
It is
rather hard to accept a handful of grains 2 mm in diameter as gravel when
accustomed to thinking in terms of somewhat larger pebbles.
In
addition, it is rarely necessary to conduct a detailed sieve analysis on a job
site, except to select a gravel pack material size.
For logging
purposes, fine pebble gravel is 4 mm or approximately one-third to
one-half of your smallest fingernail.
Sand is a matter of judgment unless run through standard sieves. The
division between very fine sand and silt is by feel.
If it
feels gritty when rubbed between your fingers, it is probably still sand.
Silt
would feel smooth to the touch, but gritty to the teeth. Clay particles are talc-like and feel smooth
both to the fingers and teeth.
This sort
of judgment is very inexact and subject to personal opinion. A small metric
ruler graded in millimeters is a useful tool for coarse sand and gravel
judgment.
Cards with
particles of a sieve-determined size glued on may be used for reference.
Consolidated
rocks made of the various sizes of particles are conglomerate (gravel), sandstone (sands),
mudstone and siltstone (very fine sands, silt), shale (silt,
clay), and soapstone (clay).
Many
sedimentary deposits, especially glacial ones, are poorly sorted and include
several sizes of particle.
Adjectives
have to be added then to identify “silty sand,” “sandy gravel,” etc.
Methods of determining porosity
Many
methods for determining porosity are available.
A common
one is to measure the quantity of water required to saturate a known
volume of the dry material.
Another
is to compare the specific gravity of a dry sample with that of a
saturated sample of the same material.
Meinzer states the procedure for using the specific gravity method. "The specific gravity of a dry sample
of coherent rock can be obtained by coating the sample with
paraffin and then weighing it in air and in water.
“The specific gravity of the sample is its weight in air divided by its
loss of weight in water.
“The specific gravity of a dry sample of incoherent material can
be obtained by weighing a measured volume of the material and dividing this
weight by the weight of an equal volume of water.
“The specific gravity of a saturated sample is equal to
the weight of the saturated sample divided by the weight of an equal volume of
water. The determination of this value involves saturation of the sample and
determination of its volume."
Methods
of making mechanical analyses of granular materials
A
mechanical analysis consists of:
1. Separating into groups the grains of different sizes in a given
volume of material
2. Calculating the weight of each group of grain sizes.
Normally, the
following grain sizes are recognized by geologists: gravel, very coarse sand,
coarse sand, medium sand, fine sand, very fine sand, silt, and clay.
These
grain sizes are defined in terms of size ranges. By agitating a sample of the
deposit in a shaking device (Ro-Tap machine) and catching the particle sizes
retained on sieves with different mesh size openings, the particle size groups
can be separated.
The
above information is excerpted in large part from Chapter 12 of the 1999 NGWA
Press publication, Ground Water Hydrology for Water
Well Contractors
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