| How Can We Contain Salt-Water Intrusion?
Understanding the potential pathways for salt-water movement is crucial for stemming the inflow of marine salt water. Part of CASA's success has been the interpretation of integrated geophysical, petrophysical, and surficial data collected off the Los Angeles and San Pedro continental shelves.
Glossary of Hydrological Terms
Aquifer. A body of rock or sediment that contains abundant fresh water in a network of connected pores (small intergranular spaces) or fractures. Aquifers generally are characterized by the amount of pore space that they contain (porosity) and the capacity for water to pass through interconnected pore networks (permeability). [Return to text passage]
Cone of Depression. The depressed shape of the water table around a well after active pumping. The water table adjacent to the well is drawn down by the water removal.
Confined Aquifer. An aquifer that is bounded above and below by impermeable layers of rock or sediment.
Confining Layer. A geologic unit which is relatively impermeable, such as clay or rock, and does not yield usable quantities of water. Confining layers, also referred to as aquitards, restrict the movement of ground water into and out of adjacent aquifers.
Potentiometric Surface. A pressure level in a confined aquifer, defined by the level to which water rises in wells.
Unconfined Aquifer. An aquifer that is not bounded by impermeable strata. It is simply the zone of saturation in water-bearing rock strata, with no impermeable overburden and recharge generally accomplished by water precolating down from above.
Water Table. The upper surface of groundwater; that contact zone between the zone of saturation and aeration in an unconfined aquifer.
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