How Wells & Aquifers Actually Work

Correcting the misconceptions that abound around water below the ground
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It is undoubtedly unintuitive that water flows in the soil and rock below our feet. This video covers the basics of groundwater engineering, including how wells are built, how injection wells work, and how aquifers interact with surface water features.
Errata: Deep well jet pumps exist that can lift water greater than 100' using an ejector and two pipes.
Practical Engineering is a KZread channel about infrastructure and the human-made world around us. It is hosted, written, and produced by Grady Hillhouse. We have new videos posted regularly, so please subscribe for updates. If you enjoyed the video, hit that ‘like’ button, give us a comment, or watch another of our videos!
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Пікірлер: 2 100

  • @_Pyroon_
    @_Pyroon_ Жыл бұрын

    This man has consistently made me more interested in dirt and concrete

  • @alveolate

    @alveolate

    Жыл бұрын

    he's not the #1 youtube channel on dirt for no reason!

  • @xntumrfo9ivrnwf

    @xntumrfo9ivrnwf

    Жыл бұрын

    I wouldn't say I'm now a big dirt & concrete aficionado, but this channel teaches stuff me stuff that I think all people should know about how a part of the modern world works. And he does it in an interesting way.

  • @JackDaniels-ex9mf

    @JackDaniels-ex9mf

    Жыл бұрын

    I think its a big deal for the average person to be more educated on how the world works around them. There is so much extra we have to do because people think information like this is "useless information" because they cant use it to make money or it wont influence them in their daily lives. But it provides so much context to the world around you, why counstruction takes so long, why they do construction where they do, and this channel has videos that show potential dangers that wouldnt be obvious if you didnt watch a video that had "useless information" in it

  • @GoTeamScotch

    @GoTeamScotch

    Жыл бұрын

    He could make a video on paint drying seem interesting

  • @RDKirbyN

    @RDKirbyN

    Жыл бұрын

    Hyper-focused men be like: dirt

  • @RealEngineering
    @RealEngineering Жыл бұрын

    Well if there was any doubt about who had the more professional engineering channel, it was settled by me laughing at 8:10.

  • @adityakhabiya5348

    @adityakhabiya5348

    Жыл бұрын

    I didn't get it pls explain🥲

  • @OwnGrid

    @OwnGrid

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes an Aquitard is very permeable and ready for ejection, but you are both pretty definitely among the top channels on KZread

  • @prateekkarn9277

    @prateekkarn9277

    Жыл бұрын

    Wow real engineering seems to have beef with everyone, half as interesting and now practical engineering

  • @jergy13

    @jergy13

    Жыл бұрын

    Real engineering is the man, and his content is rock solid. He's just honest enough to admit that aquitard is hilarious!

  • @alistairmackintosh9412

    @alistairmackintosh9412

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Stevie-J It's kinda lame...

  • @jacksonburke5858
    @jacksonburke5858 Жыл бұрын

    As a hydrologist and geotechnical engineer, I can't tell you how much I appreciate your videos. Even after my education and experience (in the field and office), your videos always seem to give me a better understanding of... well, just about any topic. Thank you!

  • @luaist

    @luaist

    Жыл бұрын

    What is geotechnical engineering? (I suppose I could google it, but what you do is probably more better at explaining than google)

  • @abidullah7256

    @abidullah7256

    Жыл бұрын

    hey

  • @twinkieerella

    @twinkieerella

    Жыл бұрын

    @@luaist I’m just a mere student but I think it is the study of soils under pressure and forces and how soils (+ water because of groundwater) behave under those conditions

  • @twinkieerella

    @twinkieerella

    Жыл бұрын

    There you will study shallow and deep foundations, settlements, lateral earth pressures, etc

  • @TheChrisLeone

    @TheChrisLeone

    11 ай бұрын

    As your local crackhead, do you have $20?

  • @HanTheProphet
    @HanTheProphet Жыл бұрын

    You consistently have the coolest visual aids, but this was one that really helped me understand this better. I was also thinking while watching this that this is such an efficient way to spread this information. A teacher may have to build and run this diagram every year, but you're educating millions for the amount of water used for a shower and some acrylic. Well done.

  • @JohnSmithShields

    @JohnSmithShields

    Жыл бұрын

    Grady is a googly eyes expert.

  • @HanTheProphet

    @HanTheProphet

    Жыл бұрын

    @Samurai Nuts love that cat as well!

  • @Svensk7119

    @Svensk7119

    7 ай бұрын

    Don't forget his voice. One of the most pleasant host voices in uoutube.

  • @toasterhavingabath6980

    @toasterhavingabath6980

    7 ай бұрын

    @@repentandbelieveinJesusChrist9(i know its probably a bot or something but) This is one of the reasons people dislike religion

  • @dj_laundry_list
    @dj_laundry_list Жыл бұрын

    He is named Grady Hillhouse because he likes grades, hills, and houses. The ultimate civil engineer

  • @northlandgaming8460

    @northlandgaming8460

    Жыл бұрын

    Okay this got a chuckle. Have my like internet stranger.

  • @vzxvzvcxasd7109

    @vzxvzvcxasd7109

    Жыл бұрын

    Good joke, I've never strung it together

  • @edwardcoe7293

    @edwardcoe7293

    Жыл бұрын

    Presumably you are a radio host concentrating mainly on washing clothes who leans a little one one direction or another? 🤪

  • @srjskam

    @srjskam

    Жыл бұрын

    I wonder if he has a middle name... What would that be? Grady Infrastructure Hillhouse?

  • @user-op8fg3ny3j

    @user-op8fg3ny3j

    Жыл бұрын

    @@srjskam it would be funny if he had a Chinese surname like ChEng which is a title for Chief Engineer 😅

  • @Anonymous-rh9hk
    @Anonymous-rh9hk Жыл бұрын

    In the Netherlands coastal regions they found that the dunes would hold a lot of clean water. They started pumping this water up around the 1870s, but ran into problems by the 1940s: salt from the sea would infiltrate the aquifer and make the water undrinkable. Now they pump fresh water into the dunes from rivers and pump it out on the other side. This allows for water storage and at the same time the sand in the aquifer cleans the water. This works so well that they don't have to add any chlorine and still have safe drinking water.

  • @paulelderson934

    @paulelderson934

    Жыл бұрын

    I live in the Netherlands and I am constantly amazed by how we have a grip on water even at pretty bizarre scales. EDIT: In fact, my entire childhood and teen years were spent at the lowest point in the Netherlands, at almost 7 meters below sea level. It's pretty weird to look up at the monument and realize that everything below it would be under water permanently.

  • @polygondwanaland8390

    @polygondwanaland8390

    Жыл бұрын

    It's definitely an underappreciated blessing to be able to fill a bottle from your tap and have clean, pure water.

  • @Chemtech2010

    @Chemtech2010

    Жыл бұрын

    Makes for nice recreational spaces and nature parks as well (example: amsterdamse waterleiding duinen)

  • @Max-kd2gh

    @Max-kd2gh

    Жыл бұрын

    The people from Netherlands are insane aquatic engineers

  • @Evanijoe

    @Evanijoe

    Жыл бұрын

    Another fun fact, here in the Netherlands we also use our aquifers to save energy on heating and cooling large buildings. Its called "Aquifer Thermal Energy Storage" (ATES)

  • @PhilRable
    @PhilRable Жыл бұрын

    Your “garage models” are fantastic they make understanding the topic so much easier. You’re a great fabricator as well as an engineer.

  • @user-sh2we9wp1r
    @user-sh2we9wp1r Жыл бұрын

    I enjoyed your video on groundwater - these are concepts that are often difficult to grasp, and you have done a remarkable job of explaining them. I know from experience, because I was a professor of Hydrogeology (yes, there is such a thing) before I retired, teaching at the 3rd y level and up. What I love most about hydrogeology is that it draws from all sciences: chemistry (aqueous, organic, and even isotope), physics (Darcy's law in particular); statistics (when dealing with heterogeneous aquifers); Mathematics (as the universal language); numerical methods and computer programming. It can be a fairly simple applied science, as you have so well illustrated; but it can also be quite a bit more complicated for example in describing muti-fluid flow in heterogeneous aquifers (think for example of gasoline spills in layered aquifers). One small addition I would like to make to your great presentation is that, in most practical applications, water movement is actually driven by a gradient of Hydraulic Potential in the direction of flow, which is made up of a pressure component and a gravitational component; not just pressure. If the aquifer is uniform and has no preferred direction of flow (or is "homogeneous and isotropic") the only time that flow is driven by a pressure gradient is in special conditions such as when flow is horizontal (no gravitational component), otherwise it is driven by the Hydraulic gradient (made up of both components). So, to properly and quantitatively describe flow in your (very nice) aquifer model you would need to use the Hydraulic Potential (often expressed in units of length of water or "Head"), particularly as you get nearer a pumping well. Sorry for the rambling (gosh I love this stuff)!

  • @5thearth
    @5thearth Жыл бұрын

    Something else to know: "Fossil" aquifers. There are many aquifers that are so deep and geologically isolated that they practically don't recharge at all. Once the water is removed it can take millennia to return. These aquifers are essentially a non-renewable resource (like oil) and unfortunately many places have become reliant on them, setting themselves up for catastrophic water shortages when the aquifers run dry.

  • @russellzauner

    @russellzauner

    Жыл бұрын

    that's why we need to take what we understand to help increase aquifer capacity where we can with indigenous materials so when they gradually break down they'll feed instead of poison their surroundings.

  • @davidpontius1084

    @davidpontius1084

    Жыл бұрын

    How could somebody figure out if their water comes from such an aquifer?

  • @recklessrickey9513

    @recklessrickey9513

    Жыл бұрын

    @@russellzauner How do you expect to increase capacity of an aquifer deep in the ground?

  • @wfemp_4730

    @wfemp_4730

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Stevie-J I hear bent coat hanger wire works well.

  • @Deaven50

    @Deaven50

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Stevie-J Ridiculous! Do you know how much a drill mage costs these days? Literally criminal, depending on the context.

  • @desmond-hawkins
    @desmond-hawkins Жыл бұрын

    The use of dye tablets to show the flow of water was a great idea! This worked much better than I thought it would, it's striking how much they "draw" the path taken instead of just dissolving in the surrounding area.

  • @hedgehog3180

    @hedgehog3180

    Жыл бұрын

    It's also really cool how it's basically a physical vector field.

  • @Kycilak

    @Kycilak

    Жыл бұрын

    @@hedgehog3180 Well, all location dependent quantities can be described as fields (vector or scalar).

  • @HoutkaaiBrugge

    @HoutkaaiBrugge

    Жыл бұрын

    Are those the same type of dye tablets used in toilets? Great idea indead.

  • @Zelmel
    @Zelmel Жыл бұрын

    As someone who is having long-term residential well issues, this video has been amazing at explaining just how these systems work in a way I hadn't previously understood properly.

  • @StoneAndersonStudio
    @StoneAndersonStudio Жыл бұрын

    Can’t wait to hear what you have to say about fracking. Another great video, and I love the small scale models as always. I’m sure a ton of extra work went into making those models, adding the dye, taking the dye out, putting in clean water, etc. That effort isn’t missed or wasted!

  • @austinpatrick2682
    @austinpatrick2682 Жыл бұрын

    I treat well water for a living and honestly I figured out much of this intuitively during my time treating water and seeing how newly drilled wells affect existing wells and how depth of a well gives different water and countless other phenomena we run into. But this is the first time I've seen it explained so well and I definitely didn't know everything you said, and most of it was only assumptions based on experiences until you confirmed some things. I love geology and live and work in a place with VERY complex geology and it's awesome to have a job I enjoy that feeds off of that interest. Thanks for this video! I've sent it to the other guys I work with.

  • @adrianjohnson7920

    @adrianjohnson7920

    Жыл бұрын

    Do you work in West Texas or New Mexico? I'm fascinated by the. hydrology of the Limipia River of Davis County TX.

  • @austinpatrick2682

    @austinpatrick2682

    Жыл бұрын

    @@adrianjohnson7920 nope, very far from there. Deep in the Appalachian mountains

  • @kingfedrick4698

    @kingfedrick4698

    Жыл бұрын

    You lokey just explained the origins of all fields of science & engineering. Lol

  • @ghostshadow9046

    @ghostshadow9046

    Жыл бұрын

    where I am at now idiots cut well casings off at ground level then wonder how water gets contaminated... runoff and snow melt etc drain down inside the well casing

  • @luaist

    @luaist

    Жыл бұрын

    You are a very valuable employee, willing to spend free time outside of work to improve your trade and teach your co-workers to help improve your services. I aspire to be like you 👍

  • @KriegZombie
    @KriegZombie Жыл бұрын

    "Correcting the misconceptions that abound around water below the ground" I appreciate how this sentenced is crafted.

  • @danielyeary148

    @danielyeary148

    Жыл бұрын

    Certainly a linguistic masterpiece

  • @tannercotham4588
    @tannercotham4588 Жыл бұрын

    As someone who drills water wells and installs complete systems, this was pretty fun to watch.

  • @johnpapa8681
    @johnpapa868111 ай бұрын

    You are a good instructor. Thank you for staying on track and not straying off the subject.

  • @dt1260
    @dt1260 Жыл бұрын

    Greetings from a Hydrogeologist in Australia! Loved your model, if only all aquifers were that simple 😉

  • @joshuacheung6518

    @joshuacheung6518

    Жыл бұрын

    Probably dumbed down for idiots like me

  • @mjhorrigan36

    @mjhorrigan36

    Жыл бұрын

    @@joshuacheung6518 honestly as someone taking hydrology 300 right now & hydrogeology next semester, he did a great job and we learned a lot of these concepts this year. Gaining/losing conditions for when groundwater enters or leaves a stream, etc,. We used dye in our surface table stream to see the velocity. The one part that he touches on that is moreso geo/hydrogeochemistry is groundwater contaminants. Can get pretty complex, just look up non aqueous phase liquids (NAPL groundwater). Great video!

  • @PatGilliland

    @PatGilliland

    Жыл бұрын

    My dad was a hydrogeologist in Canada - His tank was three stories tall and 10 meters across. :)

  • @jaykim8851

    @jaykim8851

    Жыл бұрын

    If only! I work as a hydrogeologist in the northern portions of the American Midwest and the glacial deposits left behind here 15,000 years ago created some incredibly complex aquifer systems separated by confining units.

  • @chairwood

    @chairwood

    Жыл бұрын

    they are

  • @dbackscott
    @dbackscott Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for talking about this. I’m a geotech in Florida, but did some environmental work right after graduation in Arizona. I remember having to shut down numerous dry wells (shallow injection wells for storm water management) due to contamination issues. People thought those were the magical holes that made hazardous chemicals disappear. In reality, those were the “expressway” to the aquifer we used for drinking water. To my knowledge, the Phoenix area is still dealing with plumes of groundwater contaminants that were dumped into the aquifer via dry wells or other injection wells 30 to 40 years ago.

  • @TheOriginalBlue62

    @TheOriginalBlue62

    Жыл бұрын

    Is there any practical way to clean that kind of mess up, or is it largely a 'monitor and see' approach? A friend's aunt spent (far too much) a good chunk trucking water into their hobby farm because of a condemned well, but eventually they had to bite the bullet and put in a new one....

  • @dbackscott

    @dbackscott

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TheOriginalBlue62 that’s going to vary on a case by case basis. Some of the issues in the Phoenix area were “monitor and see” while others used a more active approach. I remember one contamination site set up some wells in the center of the groundwater pollution plume to withdraw the polluted water. It was then put through a treatment process to remove the pollutants and put back into the ground via a ring of injection wells set up around the plume. In that way, the treated water would help “push” the polluted water toward the withdrawal wells in the center. Unfortunately, I don’t remember any other details about that project. It was over twelve years ago, and I had only read about it. I was not involved in it as an engineering professional.

  • @TheOriginalBlue62

    @TheOriginalBlue62

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dbackscott That makes a ton of sense though, literally flushing the ground out. Thanks for the insight!

  • @hilltaylor18

    @hilltaylor18

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TheOriginalBlue62 I work in groundwater remediation. There are several approaches, all of which are site specific. The first question is whether or not the aquifer is beneficial use. If there are several drinking water wells and residences nearby vs middle of nowhere, that will affect how aggressive (read: expensive) a solution will be chosen. The second question is whether or not it's moving, which way, and towards what. If a plume of contaminant is staying put, we can wait and see. If it's moving towards a waterway (river, ocean, bay, etc) where it will eventually discharge, that's a bigger deal. Finally, we'd have to ask what's down there. Each contaminant has a regulatory screening level. The laws above ground will dictate whether the concentrations are acceptable, or if they exceed regulations (which change depending on how the land is used/planned to be used. Industrial sites require less stringent cleanup than residential housing). So once those are answered, you have a few options. For stable (not moving too much) plumes in non beneficial use aquifers, the answer is almost always long term monitoring. We drill a bunch of monitoring wells and take samples to determine concentrations. Wells are expensive, so you try to drill as few as possible but ultimately you need to be able to produce samples that delineate the edges of the plume. Then you can confidently show regulators where the plume is and that it's staying put...and hopefully that concentrations are reducing naturally (natural attenuation) over time. Then you have your active solutions, for cases when you want to stop a plume moving, or remediate quickly. First you have pump and treat, which was described above. Sick it out, clean it, reinject. Then you have in situ remidiation. This involves any number of combinations of injecting something into the ground to change the chemistry and break down the contaminant of concern. Look up enhanced in situ bioremediation if you're interested. Very good tech which using bacteria to help create anaerobic and reducing conditions which can break down solvent plumes. Finally there is some tech to stop a plume from reaching X location. These barriers come in many forms. Generally speaking, you create a line of injection wells and inject activated carbon, sparge with air, etc to create an environment that prevents migration of the plume. This is a very active and expensive solution but can buy time and avoid disaster. So I guess in summary you can 1. Monitor 2. Treat above ground 3. Treat in situ 4. Generate a barrier Tons of cool technologies to research if you're interested. Behind the solutions above is a not insignificant amount of modeling. When each well is drilled, lithology of the borehole is recorded to give geologists an idea of what layers and types of lithology are present. Water level measurement from a well network give us an idea of which direction net flow will go, and how quickly. A well network is very expensive to create, and so we attempt to create as much data resolution as possible with as few wells as possible. A very interesting challenge when, like Grady mentioned, we are blind to what's going on below. I should go to bed now

  • @kevindigioia8408

    @kevindigioia8408

    Жыл бұрын

    @@hilltaylor18 Very good info here, I worked at a landfill in the groundwater monitoring and remediation division and a lot of these proceses are implemented. Groundwater remediation and treatment is a big deal in waste management. Many of the pre-regulation un-lined landfill modules present significant groundwater contamination issues. Complex geological makeup of the site make this a difficult and expensive process. Groundwater modeling with historical data sampling can help optimize treament but short of taking core samples in a grid of the site a lot of the stratigraphy has to be interpolated to understand how the groundewater flows, contamination plume behaves, and generally soil geology is complex and non-linear so this makes it difficult to predict. At the landfill i worked at, all of the known contamination was within shallow aquifers but you never know if and where they are hydraulically connected to deeper aquifers which can cause a much greater issue. Groundwater treament at landfills is very expensive and does not have an imediate marketable product that results from it such as potable drinking water that can be sold or used to supplement drinking water sources without significant investment. Its generally strictly for protecting future drinking water sources and the enviroment for future generations. VOCs and generally most COCs can be treated prety effectively by pumping and treating with air stripping to evaporate VOCs. A far more difficult contaminate to treat is PFAS compounds which do not readily evaporate and must be either treated with adsorption by ion exchange resins, adsorption by granular activated carbon (GAC), and filtration by reverse osmosis (RO) or nanofiltration (NF) membranes. Once its absorbed it still has to be desposed of either through incineration or burying it in hydraulically isolated areas underground.

  • @Trixtah
    @Trixtah Жыл бұрын

    One of the most fascinating things I encountered as a kid was a stream near the top of some sandstone cliffs that literally disappeared into the ground - if it'd kept flowing above ground, it would have made a waterfall over the cliffs about 150m further on. It wasn't till months later I found 'another' stream bubbling up from the ground that flowed in the same direction as the clifftop one, but at least 300m from the base of the cliffs, descending towards the sea a kilometre or so away. It was a pretty fascinating look at what seemed to me to be definitely part of the same waterway. The cliff also had small caves and voids in it for sure, although I never found a channel that matched the apparent full path of the stream - obviously, it may not have existed in one piece in the way I imagined when I was nine or ten.

  • @JoveRogers97

    @JoveRogers97

    Жыл бұрын

    That sounds incredible to find as a kid

  • @whiteroseequestrian1927

    @whiteroseequestrian1927

    10 ай бұрын

    The water does that at Mallam Cove.

  • @omniyambot9876

    @omniyambot9876

    7 ай бұрын

    attentive kid😊

  • @cagrowin1962
    @cagrowin1962 Жыл бұрын

    Love this, we dug a new well 2 years ago, 8 inch casing, 3hp pump with vfd driver, 340 feet hole, water is at 80 feet from the top. Tastes great. The casings I see in California have perforations in the steel or pvc, if I remember correctly, there is 40 feet of perforations at the bottom. Thanks again Grady

  • @smaze1782
    @smaze1782 Жыл бұрын

    It’s remarkable how good your videos are. Thanks for making them.

  • @fsmoura

    @fsmoura

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, they're very *well* made

  • @EricLS

    @EricLS

    Жыл бұрын

    So much so, that you even remarked, upon it.

  • @fsmoura
    @fsmoura Жыл бұрын

    When I saw the title I was all pumped up to see this one. It did not let me down... drilled deep into the subject and presented it very well. ✔

  • @AdaDenali

    @AdaDenali

    Жыл бұрын

    😂

  • @TheDasHatti

    @TheDasHatti

    Жыл бұрын

    I see, u got completly submerged into the topic!

  • @adams6782

    @adams6782

    Жыл бұрын

    Booooo! 😂

  • @alveolate

    @alveolate

    Жыл бұрын

    all that useful knowledge is permeating!

  • @edsargent8879

    @edsargent8879

    Жыл бұрын

    Deep video. Boring in a good way.

  • @sylvamadu3721
    @sylvamadu3721Ай бұрын

    This was so unbelievably helpful for my understanding of aquifers for my dissertation, thanks man!! You explained it so well, having visual examples too, great honesty ❤️

  • @chrispeoples4606
    @chrispeoples4606 Жыл бұрын

    Beautiful, absolutely beautiful! Even though I haven't worked in hydrogeology in a very long time, your explanation and demonstrations how aquifers work using excellent physical models. I remember calculating flow nets and such by hand in the bad old days. Would love to have physics students do similar experiments just for the hands-on experience.

  • @tiagoern8787

    @tiagoern8787

    Жыл бұрын

    Pu

  • @redlogicsquare
    @redlogicsquare Жыл бұрын

    "Even now, the rules that govern groundwater in many places are still WELL behind our collective knowledge of hydrogeology." ..... nice! One of the many nerdy reasons why I love this channel. :D

  • @WanderTheNomad

    @WanderTheNomad

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm pretty sure that was an unintended pun. "Well" is a pretty common word afterall.

  • @zumabbar

    @zumabbar

    Жыл бұрын

    @pyropulse fire

  • @zumabbar

    @zumabbar

    Жыл бұрын

    @@WanderTheNomad well, well, welll

  • @ericstyles3724

    @ericstyles3724

    Жыл бұрын

    Well... It's a deep subject.

  • @jimmangefrida5207
    @jimmangefrida5207 Жыл бұрын

    As a someone who has lived in rural areas his whole life and has had multiple wells drilled, I can tell you that most small drilling companies don't bother with the gravel or clay. They mostly drill a whole, shove a pipe in the ground and leave. Which is unfortunate because most rural areas sources of ground pollution close by such as septic systems and farms.

  • @justinpennington7682

    @justinpennington7682

    Жыл бұрын

    Move to flint Michigan. Try that water .

  • @justinpennington7682

    @justinpennington7682

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mcs699 he just wants to complain. He needs to move to flint Michigan and get a few gulps

  • @casetodaizzo

    @casetodaizzo

    Жыл бұрын

    Say what you want but he's not wrong. I sample private water wells in a rural area of Pennsylvania all the time as a part of my job, and the majority of the wells I come across are improperly constructed. Hell, buried wellheads aren't uncommon. These inadequacies can allow the surface water to influence the groundwater relatively quickly via the well's annular space or even the well column itself, leading to various water quality issues. Over 15% of privater water wells in PA contain E. coli bacteria and more than double that contain coliform bacteria. I'm not downplaying the awful situation that the people in Flint have to deal with, or even comparing it to that, but you shouldn't just ignore a real problem that actually exists because it's not some crazy sensational headline.

  • @tams805

    @tams805

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mcs699 Even if it's not a problem now (and it probably is), those wells are going to be used for a long time and become a problem.

  • @mikemondano3624

    @mikemondano3624

    Жыл бұрын

    A whole what?

  • @m-funkshun
    @m-funkshun Жыл бұрын

    A fantastic, well made, and easy-to-understand video. Timing could not be better for many of us in the rural, western US facing extremes in drought and aquifer overdraft. Thank you.

  • @ykh1992us
    @ykh1992us Жыл бұрын

    Petroleum engineer here. Excellent video, and I loved the demonstration. It's reassuring to see Darcy's law at work with streamlines forming along the pressure gradient. It irks me that civil engineers call permeability, hydraulic conductivity though, but to each their own I guess. 👍

  • @tommynott4310
    @tommynott4310 Жыл бұрын

    As someone who works as an environmental consultant and have supervised the install of 100s of monitoring and wells, it would be great to see you do a video on in-situ remediation of groundwater/soil. You have done a great job at explaining something quite alien to people.

  • @kevindigioia8408

    @kevindigioia8408

    Жыл бұрын

    I worked as an engineering intern creating groundwater models at a large local landfill and learned a lot about groundwater monitoring, treatment and remediation. We had a large array of shallow, medium and deep groundwater wells with a mix of confined and unconfined aquifers and even some artisen springs that we monitored and performed treatment on. Quite a facinating multi-million dollar sub field of waste managment in civil engineering. We also had some in-situ /treatment injection wells in the past that utilized Hydrogen Release Compounds (HRC) for bio-remediation of VOCs into Viynl choride. It seems as though the state water board is moving away from injection wells using bio-remediation compounds as the they stipulate dilution requirements for their use that make the actual process ineffective in both results and cost. Our primary treatment system was pumping VOC contaminated groundwater from shallow wells through air stripper towers and then re-injecting the clean water back into the water table through infiltration basins ungradient of the landfill site.

  • @BC25citizen

    @BC25citizen

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes please.

  • @adventureike
    @adventureike Жыл бұрын

    As a fellow San Antonian, thanks for drilling into this subject and presenting amazing models. Aquifer health is critically important as water becomes a more and more important issue and being less visible than surface water it does not get the attention it deserves.

  • @olegvelichko1659
    @olegvelichko1659 Жыл бұрын

    This video could’ve been an hour long, and I’d still watch it “on a single breath”. Absolutely top notch edutainment. Love these videos. Thank You for the hard work and the awesome content.

  • @thetheflyinghawaiian
    @thetheflyinghawaiian Жыл бұрын

    Hydrogeologist/Environmental Engineer here, just excited to see one of my favorite channels making a high quality video about something I love.

  • @DanSmithBK
    @DanSmithBK Жыл бұрын

    Grady is one of the reasons KZread has my attention. What brilliant content, delivered without the condescension we get from other media, and providing both education and knowledge with sincere enthusiasm. What’s not to love?! Thanks Grady!

  • @MartijnCoppoolse

    @MartijnCoppoolse

    Жыл бұрын

    Grady is one of the reasons I keep Nebula :-)

  • @andrebartels1690

    @andrebartels1690

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks Grady! 👍

  • @ry-guy_
    @ry-guy_ Жыл бұрын

    Video idea: the salt caverns that make up the US strategic oil reserve. I've always wondered how they can store so much oil and I'm sure you could do impressive research I never could to learn more.

  • @giangtruc3376

    @giangtruc3376

    Жыл бұрын

    ok

  • @r.foersom

    @r.foersom

    Жыл бұрын

    Are those salt caverns really used for oil storage? Or rather for (natural) gas storage like the 2 gas storage salt caverns in Denmark?

  • @ry-guy_

    @ry-guy_

    Жыл бұрын

    @@r.foersom Yep! They hold around 714 million barrels. Storing that above ground would be risky whereas the salt caverns keep it from escaping and polluting and naturally repair themselves. It is really interesting and I'm sure Grady could make a really cool video on it.

  • @bigdrip54

    @bigdrip54

    Жыл бұрын

    All BS

  • @martygingras8683
    @martygingras868310 ай бұрын

    Discovered this channel only a day or so ago and I'm thrilled. Great content and delivery.

  • @ThZuao
    @ThZuao Жыл бұрын

    "Number 1 channel about dirt" Spot on, Grady.

  • @ethhics
    @ethhics Жыл бұрын

    Very good video, explained in simple terms. For my undergraduate degree, I modeled an Aquifer and simulated the groundwater flow through it. It's an interesting topic, which I also come across at my workplace often

  • @sageparis9495
    @sageparis9495 Жыл бұрын

    Grady!!! Thank you!!! My groundwater hydrology class for my masters program at the University of Michigan was my favorite class ever---and I'm so impressed how you made such a clear and understandable video for teaching what the deal is with groundwater and well hydraulics. This video meant a lot to me; now I'm gonna send it to my friends to better explain what I study 😂. Super cool how you mentioned San Antonio too; I'm looking forward to that future video on fracking.

  • @TidBitOf
    @TidBitOf Жыл бұрын

    I work on a groundwater team for Environmental Remediation. I work with water wells every single day. This video is amazing, I sent it to the whole team!

  • @andrerenault
    @andrerenault Жыл бұрын

    I'm a TA for a hydraulics engineering course and I just showed your series of water-related videos to the prof I work for. He loves them and I might show them in class soon! When I teach, I find it easy to get lost in the math and forget the big picture of why these things matter, and your videos help me keep that in mind.

  • @niallkinsella2687
    @niallkinsella2687 Жыл бұрын

    Great fun trying to explain aquifer dynamics to my family recently. Like why our old shallow well dried up around the same time as some neighbors on a slightly lower elevation dug their wells a few years ago.

  • @Torque7976
    @Torque7976 Жыл бұрын

    Excellent video, one note from someone highly versed in wells and aquifers: contamination won’t generally occur as readily as your model would suggest in non-consolidated wells (if at all) as the general functionality of wells relies on the casing being a lower pressure space than the surrounding aquifer so water flows in and up to a static level (of course barring artesian wells). It’s like trying to shove a contaminant into an open spigot. The contaminate would have to be denser than water, highly soluble yet able to resist denaturing and at such a concentration as to not be diluted to a point of “who cares”. The well would also have be relatively inactive (avg water use per person is 100gal/day) in order for the contaminant to truly propagate into the aquifer. It would have to be a perfect storm of conditions or gross negligence to result in any significant contamination to an aquifer. However, that said, your contamination model would be more relevant for consolidated wells that feed from above and some bucket wells. Other than, spot on, fantastic modeling and a very educational video!

  • @adrianjohnson7920

    @adrianjohnson7920

    Жыл бұрын

    Leading to the whole topic of "shocking" a domestic well to keep it sanitary. In rural NM some people shock their wells once a week or once a month.

  • @Torque7976

    @Torque7976

    Жыл бұрын

    @@adrianjohnson7920 completely unnecessary in the vast majority of cases. In fact, the methods used by most people to “shock” their well are actually entire ineffective. The chemicals a homeowner without industry licensing can get are simply not worth even wasting your time on. Pouring bleach in your well, for instance, does exactly nothing unless you’re going to empty a 55 gallon drum (please don’t do this) and it’s still not going to penetrate the aquifer. For that we use a weighted, slow release antimicrobial like Sterilene-which even then has to be surged via air compressor into the aquifer. People who have their well professionally cleaned every few years are generally being taken advantage of by their servicer. A properly constructed well generally has no visible sediment or bacterial content that would require cleaning-there are some exceedingly rare exceptions to that rule. A lot of companies just claim that a well must be cleaned regularly so they can make money when in fact, unless there is a known structural or native bacterial issue, there is absolutely no reason to touch a properly constructed well. Some exceptions to this rule are super shallow wells that are fed by surface water (generally

  • @adrianjohnson7920

    @adrianjohnson7920

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Torque7976 Thanks for explaining this.

  • @nobodylovesditto
    @nobodylovesditto Жыл бұрын

    Grady, consuming your content assures me I made the right choice going into engineering. I know that qualitative engineering is a heck of a lot more fun than quantitative engineering, but the interest remains. Thank you for sharing.

  • @ericlotze7724
    @ericlotze7724 Жыл бұрын

    Your models are just AMAZING. If i ever make a kid’s science museum, or even at a makerspace i want to make them all! I have fond memories of the Dam simulation at “Technopolis” in Belgium as a kid. It was just constantly flowing water on a slope with all sorts of materials and bypass so you could build damns and test them. Your demonstration models are like that, but actually demonstrate more science, and are clear so they just look amazing.

  • @jaykim8851
    @jaykim8851 Жыл бұрын

    This was an amazing video and an excellent initial primer for hydrogeology. I work as a hydrogeologist and spend a lot of my time explaining to others how groundwater flow and groundwater contamination occurs. In grad school we would have complex acrylic sand tank models with confining layers, fractured bedrock, units with different hydraulic conductivities, pumping and monitoring wells. They're a great tool to use to teach groundwater to students!

  • @JamieHamelSmith
    @JamieHamelSmith Жыл бұрын

    Your videos are simply consistently excellent. This was such an amazing demo of groundwater ❤️

  • @williamgeorge2045
    @williamgeorge2045 Жыл бұрын

    Wow. "#1 channel on the internet about dirt". The hubris of man truly knows no bounds.

  • @Dayton86
    @Dayton86 Жыл бұрын

    As a water treatment operator, this is probably one of the best explanation I have seen for wells/aquifers. Thank you sir.

  • @boxCatalogue
    @boxCatalogue Жыл бұрын

    I very rarely have an interest in the stuff Grady covers until I see him build a model of it in his garage and then I think "wow that's so interesting". Probably one of the best teachers I've ever come across.

  • @shithighandwatch8657
    @shithighandwatch8657 Жыл бұрын

    Reading for my exams using your videos. Our professor, sending us your videos, gave us the best way to learn hydraulic engineering. Really helped us a lot

  • @Mafhuwa
    @Mafhuwa Жыл бұрын

    You just made me remember why I became a civil engineer . This is awesome 🔥 aquifer confused me alot during my university days. This made it all clear

  • @briannelson605
    @briannelson605 Жыл бұрын

    I'm a petroleum engineer and would highly recommend the book well testing by John Lee. It explains all the math behind how fluid flows through porous medium

  • @willierants5880

    @willierants5880

    Жыл бұрын

    My dad was a Petroleum Engineer.

  • @samyb2834

    @samyb2834

    Жыл бұрын

    Interesting!

  • @Trading-sd4de

    @Trading-sd4de

    Жыл бұрын

    Great video. I don't know who needs to hear this but if you really want to grow your money and generate wealth, start small and with the little that you have, and invest it into stocks bitcoin and other crypto currencies I'm a living testimony from this.

  • @acekings3632

    @acekings3632

    Жыл бұрын

    Very helpful mate. This is what I needed to hear today.

  • @cruzmagliulo6367

    @cruzmagliulo6367

    Жыл бұрын

    @@glendorabeavers5922 Are you talking about sir Cooper leo jaxon. From Florida ??

  • @karthikkr93
    @karthikkr93 Жыл бұрын

    Yes please cover fracking! I'm a doctor so with my understanding of fracking I get how it works, but I'd love to see a video on the things I don't know, like the unintended consequences to the surrounding land, and any chemicals they may use in said process.

  • @cmdr1911

    @cmdr1911

    Жыл бұрын

    Fracing is extremely complex. I have worked as a construction consultant in oil and gas for years and have had multiple people explain. The technology with drilling and completing is scary accurate.

  • @karthikkr93

    @karthikkr93

    Жыл бұрын

    @@cmdr1911 based on your experience are there any common side effects in the surrounding area of fracking that you may have observed or witnessed?

  • @cmdr1911

    @cmdr1911

    Жыл бұрын

    @@karthikkr93 Not with fracing. I have seen contamination of surface water and soil doing some pretty extensive clean ups for spills and accidents that were mishandled and not reported by the contractor. The site is designed to hold brine and not release it. Emission and air quality would be another question and there is a huge push to reduce them and monitor. I would say a vast majority are safe. WV, SE Ohio and Western PA area heavily contaminated from coal and steel that would make it difficult to show causation beyound correlation of illness and wells

  • @ericlotze7724

    @ericlotze7724

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah from what i heard main risk is surface spills of drill mud/fracking fluid. Also typically silica is used as a “proppant” (essentially use sand as a wedge in the cracks formed to keep them open even if pressure is reduced). This leads to the issues of *Sand Mining*, but on steroids due to the specific needed and the sheer amount. Also all the fluids components don’t have to be publicly disclosed if I remember correctly.

  • @ericlotze7724

    @ericlotze7724

    Жыл бұрын

    What’s interesting too is it can be used for “Enhanced Geothermal Systems” (EGS); essentially making non-porous rock porous so that the water can flow through. In theory if you drill deep enough, everywhere on earth has “Hot Dry Rock” which can be turned into an EGS, so *assuming more heat flows in than you withdrawal, and that the conditions are right* you have (practically in a human time scale -) infinite mostly green energy everywhere.

  • @JesusSavesRepent
    @JesusSavesRepent Жыл бұрын

    I graduated with my BSME in Dec 2021 and I love your channel still - love it even more now that I know you’re from San Antonio. I grew up off of 35 and Division.

  • @MooglingLR
    @MooglingLR Жыл бұрын

    Thanks so much for this video. It's the first time I've seen shallow and deep groundwater as separate concepts.

  • @trawallyousman2509
    @trawallyousman2509 Жыл бұрын

    I really enjoy practical engineering, we read but sometime can't understand the details. By watching you videos makes me feel better. Once again thank you.

  • @PracticalEngineeringChannel
    @PracticalEngineeringChannel Жыл бұрын

    📺Get access to both CS and Nebula for only $15/year: curiositystream.com/practicalengineering 📚 Did you know I wrote a book? Get it at a discount before November: practical.engineering/book

  • @malte2505

    @malte2505

    Жыл бұрын

    nah

  • @davidpottage6402

    @davidpottage6402

    Жыл бұрын

    Could you put a direct link to the video in Nebula at the top of the KZread description. KZread is much better for browsing but the ads are annoying. For creators that are also on Nebula it would be great if I could click through once I have found a video on KZread. Thx

  • @yosconisi

    @yosconisi

    Жыл бұрын

    Clearly part of the show opener should be "The number 1 channel on dirt"

  • @HesadrianBoediman

    @HesadrianBoediman

    Жыл бұрын

    Thx Grady, perhaps you could link and research or create separate video on Sidoarjo Mud disaster, I believe it greatly reflects the nature power of groundwater

  • @kohlerk30

    @kohlerk30

    Жыл бұрын

    Refering to your book, do you plan on doing an audio version?

  • @1101agaoj
    @1101agaoj Жыл бұрын

    Amazing breakdown and explanations WITH a verbal delivery that keeps viewer engaged and eager to learn. Too bad ALL engineering is not this easily accessible.

  • @justjast
    @justjast9 ай бұрын

    Wow - that was so interesting! 73 - years old and that's the first good explanation I've every heard...and I did take geology and water quality classes in college. 😂Moving to an old house in the country and have to have a new well dug. Not sure what the problem was with the old one, but now I'm very curious. Thanks for your detailed explanation and excellent visuals.

  • @eaglescout1984
    @eaglescout1984 Жыл бұрын

    Grady, you'd probably fine this story interesting. I worked on a project one time to build a new middle school next to an existing elementary school. Through investigation, it was determined that the existing well that served the elementary school would not have the output to serve both schools and they needed to select a site to drill a well for the middle school. They settled on a location and when they went to drill the well, they realized they had made an artesian well. Needless to say the new well was more than acceptable to meet the demands of the new school.

  • @paddaydaddy
    @paddaydaddy Жыл бұрын

    My 15 week hydro-geology class summarized in 15 minutes. Great video!

  • @Megabean
    @Megabean Жыл бұрын

    I would love it if you did a video on fracking. It's hard to get unmuddled information about it.

  • @shakeradio
    @shakeradio11 ай бұрын

    Brilliant explanation and model mate! well done! 🙏🏻

  • @jheadley635
    @jheadley635 Жыл бұрын

    I'm one semester away from finishing my hydrology degree, and if this video had been made 4 years ago, I would have understood everything so much more easily! Amazing video!

  • @sageparis9495

    @sageparis9495

    Жыл бұрын

    Same here!!! One semester away! Where's your program if you don't mind me asking?

  • @Doomzor
    @Doomzor Жыл бұрын

    I love your stuff! Please keep being you. I really enjoy your videos on these topics that never seem to receive attention, and your explanations are wonderful. Again, thank you.

  • @Fuchswinter
    @Fuchswinter Жыл бұрын

    I'm once again amazed by what goes on right before our eyes, unseen. Ground water is so often talked about but the mechanisms have always been a mystery to me. Grady explains it so well, even to a layman like me. This is why I love this channel.

  • @revolutiongaming970
    @revolutiongaming97010 ай бұрын

    I actually work for a geotechnical drilling company and this video brought joy to me I don’t see hardly any talk about the type of stuff we do.

  • @Faroesx
    @Faroesx Жыл бұрын

    Unsurprisingly, another very well researched video with amazing topics and exciting explanations. You truly are amazing. Thank you for your amazing content!

  • @LabiaLicker
    @LabiaLicker Жыл бұрын

    A video on fracking would be great!

  • @RobFeldkamp

    @RobFeldkamp

    Жыл бұрын

    Agreed

  • @AusyG
    @AusyG Жыл бұрын

    I've seen several artesian wells in the mountains of Virginia. Some of the clearest, cleanest, coolest water I've ever had in my life

  • @Beryllahawk
    @Beryllahawk Жыл бұрын

    Wow!! I lived for about six years with a well (I'm in the southeast USA) and never did understand how it worked. And I got to see and mess with an artesian well once also, and had always wondered what the difference was between a "real" well and the natural one. What a wonderfully concise and clear explanation - and demonstration!

  • @WhichDoctor1
    @WhichDoctor1 Жыл бұрын

    Another way to engineer the refilling of aquifers is by the construction of water management structures like Swales, permeable damns, terraces and ponds to catch the run-off from storms or monsoons and allow it to naturally seep into the groundwater system. These have proven extremely successful in areas of India, where almost all the water used throughout the year comes from aquifers, but the only time those are refilled is over the few weeks of the monsoon. Every bit of water that can be prevented from immediately running off the surface and into rivers means more water ending up underground meaning more water for the rest of the year. Whereas deforestation, removal of hedges, draining of wetlands, filling in of ponds and such results in surface water being able to move quickly into rivers and away, not only resulting in fewer water reserves in that location but an increase in flooding levels downstream

  • @Idkidkidk716
    @Idkidkidk716 Жыл бұрын

    Let’s just appreciate all the work he put into this model. Also explain how the coal ash pit from duke energy in North Carolina got into the ground water and contaminated all well water permanently it was a news story a while ago.

  • @adrianjohnson7920

    @adrianjohnson7920

    Жыл бұрын

    Also explains how the ground water around Lake Somerville , Texas was contaminated by a local creosote plant a century ago. Dang.

  • @matthewcalderon8940
    @matthewcalderon8940 Жыл бұрын

    Grady, I love your vids because they put me to sleep, your voice is so calming for some reason! Dw I rewatch your video when I'm not tired to understand what you're saying!

  • @beshiluthermfwankila7424
    @beshiluthermfwankila7424 Жыл бұрын

    I'm a water engineering student. Your channel is the best discovery I made ever since I started my course

  • @kevinbyrne4538
    @kevinbyrne4538 Жыл бұрын

    In my town (northeastern USA) the water which feeds our town's aquifer flows through a former industrial site. So our water contains chromium 6 (a carcinogen) from an old electroplating plant, trichoroethane (an industrial solvent), and polyfluorohydrocarbons (industrial lubricants). The water is so naturally acidic that plumbers throughout the county made their livings by replacing our copper pipes which the water would corrode -- until the town started to add lye (sodium hydroxide) to the water. And the water naturally contains so much manganese that it was deemed a danger to infants. And it contains so much lime that you can't use it to wash cars or drinking glasses because it leaves water spots.

  • @SuperDeinVadda

    @SuperDeinVadda

    Жыл бұрын

    Sounds like fun. It's a shame how water is treated around the world. Especially since it's the most important resource in the world.

  • @kevinbyrne4538

    @kevinbyrne4538

    Жыл бұрын

    @@SuperDeinVadda -- The town has spent millions trying to improve the quality of the water: a facility to remove manganese using bacteria; equipment to add lye and fluoride to the water; a "stripping tower" to remove the trichloroethane; ... I don't drink the town water.

  • @aTrippyFarmer
    @aTrippyFarmer Жыл бұрын

    As a farmer in Illinois, I find this fascinating. Although we do not rely on aquifers to supply water for our crops, our water management might have an impact way beyond the gates of our farm. It would be interesting to see a video talking about the hypoxic zone in the Gulf of Mexico. I know you would present it well!

  • @julieheath6335

    @julieheath6335

    Жыл бұрын

    Unfortunately, I'm pretty sure you are right about the impacts. Farmers tend to massively over fertilize their crops and the fallout is toxic, cancer causing nitrates which are polluting our groundwater and surface water. So sad.

  • @loboxx337

    @loboxx337

    8 ай бұрын

    @@julieheath6335 Over-fertilize which leads to high cost, be real.

  • @osimnod
    @osimnod Жыл бұрын

    This was helpful in understanding how shallow (50 - 300 feet) water wells affect ground water and subsurface flows. The Village Drill is one unique, portable design for drilling fresh water wells in developing countries and worth a look for anyone interested.

  • @erictrudel1164
    @erictrudel1164 Жыл бұрын

    I listen to a lot of your videos and learn a lot. But this video is incredible. Love you simulator!

  • @OutbackCatgirl
    @OutbackCatgirl Жыл бұрын

    This reminds me of an aquifer related incident where a worker nearly got buried alive when a pressurised aquifer broke through a layer of silt, causing quicksand conditions around the caisson's walls. This occured during the construction of an underground lift station for wastewater, after the caisson sunk to contain it was drained, removing the counteracting force keeping the lower aquifer from seeping upwards. insufficient site surveys missed the deeper of two aquifers, and nearly proved fatal as the caisson rapidly flooded and caused quicksand conditions beneath a worker standing on the surface. I think there's a video about it out there somewhere i remember seeing at some point, it was in BC.

  • @brucenedza4616

    @brucenedza4616

    Жыл бұрын

    Ah, quick sand, there's a topic for Grady to do a video on

  • @pegasusfinancialplanningll8331
    @pegasusfinancialplanningll8331 Жыл бұрын

    Very interesting. I would love to hear you explain how the giant aquifer exists under most of Sahara in northeaster Africa.

  • @OnTheToolsWithSal
    @OnTheToolsWithSal Жыл бұрын

    As a water plant operator, this is a great video to help teach new operator. Love all of your content!

  • @heavyjunkops
    @heavyjunkops Жыл бұрын

    I am a well driller for a ground water control company. Thank you for this video. I will now be sharing it with everyone that asks me about what I do for a living.

  • @koalatycontent1305
    @koalatycontent1305 Жыл бұрын

    As a future civil engineer, I can't thank you enough for this channel. I'm starting my major-specific studies next fall and your videos are perfect to get interested in the most random engineering topics.

  • @luaist

    @luaist

    Жыл бұрын

    Good luck in your studies

  • @fsmoura
    @fsmoura Жыл бұрын

    Whenever I'm *thirsty* for information, I always come back to this channel, for it's a veritable *well* of knowledge.

  • @Legendendear

    @Legendendear

    Жыл бұрын

    badum

  • @GoodEnoughVenson_sigueacristo

    @GoodEnoughVenson_sigueacristo

    Жыл бұрын

    I tried to report this comment, but I couldn’t find the option for pun terrorism.

  • @4FYTfa8EjYHNXjChe8xs7xmC5pNEtz

    @4FYTfa8EjYHNXjChe8xs7xmC5pNEtz

    Жыл бұрын

    Grady probes his subject deeply, thoroughly, and lovingly. And he's not afraid to get down and dirty.

  • @freye1guy
    @freye1guy Жыл бұрын

    Grady! Love you and your content!!! Big thanks for all you do! The geotechnical content is my favorite. You’re editing and content are top notch. Keep rocking top dog!

  • @jacklarue7049
    @jacklarue70492 ай бұрын

    This was WAY more interesting, informative, and perfectly explained than I was expecting upon clicking. Well done, sir, you’ve gained another sub and I hope to learn much more on your channel. Grade A stuff you got here!

  • @ZGryphon
    @ZGryphon Жыл бұрын

    "Even now, the rules that govern groundwater in many places are still _well_ behind our collective knowledge of hydrogeology." I see what you did there, Grady.

  • @Evergreen64
    @Evergreen64 Жыл бұрын

    Great model. It's not easy to visualize this kind of movement.

  • @sirdeakia
    @sirdeakia Жыл бұрын

    The beauty of the intelligent simplicity on your model is so educational and visual that it is almost artistic

  • @typezero8929
    @typezero8929 Жыл бұрын

    This is an absolute litany of important information that everyone should know. I learned a lot!

  • @dreamingwolf8382
    @dreamingwolf8382 Жыл бұрын

    laws about ground water are "well" behind...? really? not 30 seconds in and you make a terrible pun? I love it. 10 out of 10.

  • @misstweetypie1
    @misstweetypie1 Жыл бұрын

    I didn’t see any on your page, so I’m wondering if you could do a video about swales and whether they can recharge aquifers/groundwater. They are big in the permaculture movement, and I’m wondering if they are really as effective as their proponents claim they are.

  • @97itachiuchiha

    @97itachiuchiha

    Жыл бұрын

    I would also enjoy a video on this. I was hoping there would be a mention of other ways to facilitate groundwater recharge. C'mon Grady, it involves moving soils to effect the movement of water, so you'll be into it!

  • @Emiliano-Mcallister
    @Emiliano-McallisterАй бұрын

    Brilliant explanation and model mate! well done!

  • @wakkopete
    @wakkopete Жыл бұрын

    This reminds me how my parents well was contaminated by their neighbors cracked septic tank. Water smelled like sewage for years before the broken septic tank was located. I'd be curious to see a video of how those two work together

  • @truongtran-sl6rh

    @truongtran-sl6rh

    Жыл бұрын

    ok

  • @gregdubya1993

    @gregdubya1993

    Жыл бұрын

    How close were they?

  • @vadimmakarov6811

    @vadimmakarov6811

    Жыл бұрын

    In Russia, the building standards say these must be separated by 15 m at least. How close were yours?

  • @riverbankfisher
    @riverbankfisher Жыл бұрын

    Much thanks sir, for this highly informative look at subterranean water. In my neck of the woods, invasive Chinese-owned dredging boats have started sucking up riverbed sand to sell by the truckload, and since I own a number of riverside earthen catfish ponds, I got to wondering whether the continuous extraction of sand upstream from my pond areas, will ultimately result in the riverside groundwater drying up and thus destroying my livelihood. The once-pristine and clear waters of the river now run a muddy brown color year-round, and many local fish species have vanished, while the riverside swamp has noticeably receded. Any comments that you might have regarding the long-term effects of this bandit sand-dredging operation would be appreciated.

  • @blakena4907
    @blakena4907 Жыл бұрын

    Oh, that is such a cool demonstration. You're the best, Grady.

  • @Jay-ho9io
    @Jay-ho9io Жыл бұрын

    This is the best produced and one of the very best overall films you've made, Grady! 👍🏼

  • @fsmoura
    @fsmoura Жыл бұрын

    I trust this channel to explain this *well.* 👍

  • @nickname1392

    @nickname1392

    Жыл бұрын

    Get.out.

  • @Legendendear

    @Legendendear

    Жыл бұрын

    badum

  • @chazgriffin5582
    @chazgriffin558210 ай бұрын

    Yeah my small-town we have this place called Duke energy put up some facility well unbenounced to everybody south of them we had to redrill our well's deeper because we all ran of water.