Environmental Geology
Geology 406/506

Flow Nets: a quick look at
groundwater flow and the water table

The Water Table, Flow Nets and Groundwater Flow

Water table contour lines (or flow lines) are similar to topographic lines on a map. They essentially represent "elevations" in the subsurface.  These elevations are the hydraulic head. (see module 7 - part 2)

Water table contour lines can be used to tell which way groundwater will flow in a given region. Lots of wells are drilled and hydraulic head is measured in each one. Water table contours are drawn that join areas of equal head (like "connect-the-dots"!). These water table contours lines are also called equipotential lines. The map of contour lines is called a flow net. Remember: groundwater always moves from an area of higher hydraulic head to an area of lower hydraulic head, and perpendicular to equipotential lines.


Some flow net sketches that will help clarify the relationships between aquifer matrix, and groundwater movement:

Qal

=

Quaternary alluvium

_______

=

WT Contour

----------->

=

Flow Direction

o

=

Producing Well
1.

wpe1.jpg (20549 bytes)

A simple flow net.

Cross-profile view:
wpe2.jpg (4952 bytes)

2.

wpe3.jpg (27880 bytes)

The effect of a producing well in a narrow, variable width, aquifer.
3.

wpe4.jpg (18970 bytes)

Water is moving from Qal to granite.
Water is moving from Granite to Qal.
4.

wpe5.jpg (13337 bytes)

An area of high permeability (ellipse in brown). Distorted contours may occur due to anisotropic conditions (changes in aquifer properties from one place to the next).
5.

wpe6.jpg (32427 bytes)

An example drainage basin.
wpeA.jpg (68160 bytes)

Groundwater flow net
Red lines indicate positions of water table contours when well is pumping. (How would a downslope cross-section appear if drawn straight through the well?)

END OF QUICK REVIEW
BACK TO THE TOP

NEED A QUICK REVIEW OF AQUIFER BASICS?
CHECK HERE

NEED A QUICK REVIEW OF GROUNDWATER FLOW?
CHECK HERE

NEED A QUICK REVIEW OF CONTAMINANT PLUMES?
CHECK HERE
(this is in PDF format,
CLICK for more information)

Return to the Environmental Geology Homepage

BACK TO THE IVC HOMEPAGE