Saturday, October 27, 2007

Groundwater, Mountains and Media

An article in India Today, gave me this opportunity to write about geology. I don't write about it enough, but then the media doesn't cover it enough :-)

The October 15th issue of India Today had an article about Dr. Ritesh Arya, a hydrogeologist, who has turned to drilling for groundwater at very high altitudes in the Himalayas. India Today reporter Ramesh Vinayak interviewed him. Dr. Arya has caused quite a sensation by drilling successfully for groundwater at fifteen thousand feet. The Army and the locals are pleased with him. Villages and army posts which had to bring water by tankers, now have flowing water through bore wells. Hurray for Dr. Arya and his geological skills. Mr. Vinayak's reporting on geology is another matter. Here is what he writes about Dr. Arya's research thesis. "At the heart of his ground-breaking thesis is the finding that groundwater resources in the Himalayan region depend on the type of rocks and structural parameters like folds, fissures and fault-line in the rock strata. I am sure Dr. Arya very skillfully interpreted the geology, but I don't see any ground-breaking revelations here. The parameters that control groundwater occurrence and movement are pretty much the same everywhere, no matter what the altitude, i.e. geological properties of rocks and structural features such as fractures, joints, faults. Then Mr Vinayak writes something bizarre," The mountains have groundwater just like the plains but the water movement at high-altitude is controlled by principles of gravity and iso-stacy (wherein the water level is itself up)". Wow! That must have been the physics class I missed in school. I had no idea water responds to gravity differently in the mountains than in the plains. And what is this iso-stacy? The term is isostacy and it is a concept used to explain why topography exists on a continental scale. The lithosphere, which is the rigid outer shell comprising the earth's tectonic plates rides on a plastic asthenosphere. Plastic in the sense that the material deforms by plastic flow. Imagine a block of wood floating in water. The height of the wooden block above water-level is determined by its density and thickness. The lithosphere similarly rides upon the asthenosphere at a height depending upon its density and thickness. As you must have guessed by now, it has nothing whatsoever to do with groundwater. Here's a suggestion for reporters who are blank about science. Why not ask the scientist being interviewed to write a couple of paragraphs?

Okay, enough harassing the media. On to more geology. Groundwater high in the mountains reminded me of my trekking days in college. Where I live in Pune, the popular places to trek were the Sahyadri mountains, and particularly the various 16th century forts strategically placed along the western ghat escarpments. Many of these forts have fresh water wells. People are often surprised to learn that there is groundwater so high up. The popular thinking is that water will just flow down the slope or through cracks and find the lowest level such as adjoining valleys or plains to accumulate. But there can be plenty of groundwater in these western ghats. These are not orogenic mountains like the Himalayas, but were formed during and after the Deccan Trap volcanic eruptions by a combination of the processes of magmatic underplating and denudational uplift. Magmatic underplating refers to the process whereby much of the melt produced in the mantle during such large magmatic events such as the Deccan Traps does not reach the surface but sticks to the underside of the lithosphere. All this hot stuff makes the lithosphere buoyant causing uplift. Most of the uplift is however thought to be denudational uplift (evidence summarized in Sheth 2007) which refers to the process whereby the lithosphere which has been depressed by the weight of the thick volcanic pile rebounds upon removal of the material by erosion causing uplift. This may take place millions of years after the volcanic event. This is analogous to an iceberg floating in water. If you shave off some ice from the top, the iceberg will rise by a proportional amount. Iso-stacy or rather isostacy is in action in the Deccan Traps as well. The Sahyadris are formed of two main types of basalts which occur as alternating layers; amygdaloidal basalt which solidified from more viscous lava and generally forms gentler erosional slopes and compact basalt which solidified from more fluid lava and forms steeper slopes as seen in image below.

Groundwater systems can occur in both types of basalt. My friend Dr. Himanshu Kulkarni has studied these basalt groundwater systems extensively. After two decades of research, some general principles are emerging. Basalts are crystalline rocks with an interlocking fabric of crystals. So, water in these rocks is stored and flows along cracks, joints and fractures. Both, horizontal sheet joints and vertical joints serve as conduits for water flow. Amgdaloidal basalt is generally the more capacious in water storage and high yielding aquifers are those where a layer of amygdaloidal basalt is underlain by the more impermeable compact basalt (Kulkarni et. al. 2000). The figure below illustrates these concepts of basalt hydrogeology.

Source: Advanced Center for Water Resources Development and Management

Such conditions for the formation of a groundwater system are met at many of the high-altitude forts. At Sinhagad, one of the most popular forts near Pune, there are several fresh water wells and storage tanks that have exploited such structural zones of groundwater flow.

In image the brown arrows point to horizontal sheet joints developed at the junction of two lava flows. Such joints among other joint systems form a zone of groundwater flow (blue arrows). The well indicated by the pink arrow captures this flow. The circular green spots are additional water storage tanks.

Groundwater exploration "consultants" have got a bad reputation, sometimes richly deserved, in my part of the country in the state of Maharashtra. People now have smartened up but in the bad old days there were scamsters walking around with a magnetic compass claiming to locate water, and then those who dabbled in dowsing. It was great to read that Dr. Arya relies on sound geological principles for his explorations. In any case, dowsing in the mountains can be dangerous.

What I would like to know is if the principles of dowsing are any different in the mountains than in the plains.

References:

H. Kulkarni, S. B. Deolankar, A. Lalwani, B. Joseph, S. Pawar, 2000; Hydrogeological framework of the Deccan basalt groundwater systems, west-central India; Hydrogeology Journal; Volume 8, Number 4, p. 368-378.

Hetu C. Sheth 2007; Plume-related regional pre-volcanic uplift in the Deccan Traps: Absence of evidence, evidence of absence; Hetu C. Sheth; In www.MantlePlumes.org

2 comments:

  1. Error Prone!!

    Hi Suvrat,
    Your frustration with inaccuracies in science reporting is justified. If it is any solace to you, I may add, it is universal in most Indian media. Take this small example that needs only Second standard arithematic to spot the mistake. This one appeared in Asian Age.
    =========================
    HCC bags contracts worth Rs 983cr in Delhi, Mumbai
    from Asian Age/Business by Asian Age

    By Our Correspondent

    Mumbai, Oct. 26: Hindustan Construction Company Limited (HCC) has received three major orders worth Rs 983 crores to construct two underground stations in New Delhi and build a water tunnel in Mumbai. This was stated by HCC vice-president (finance) Pravin Sood while addressing the media in Mumbai on, Friday.

    He said, "The orders include a Rs 774.64 crores contract from Delhi Metro Rail Corporation for constructing two underground stations and a tunnel between New Delhi and Talkatora Garden stations.

    "Also, we have bagged another order worth Rs 727 crores from the Bombay Municipal Corporation to construct a large water tunnel.
    =========================
    In defense of the scribes I conjecture that they are so hard pressed for time, flitting from conference to conference and eating samosas & sipping tea, poor beasts hardly can attend to their work - 'checking the veracity' of the handouts.

    The hydrogeologist story you have covered is slightly different, but basically the pattern fits. Sound bytes are at a premium, studiousness is at basement bargain prices.

    You have given a clean chit to the scientists, but I am not so sure of their non culpability. Many times experts are prone to grandiloquence when in company of the laymen and may make claims far beyond their own considerable competence. You have pointed out yourself in Watson, Flannery, Pachauri-Nuclear deal, et al.

    In case you are serious about building statistics & an index on 'Error Prone' journalism, I am willing to contribute. I guess you will soon get bored with the monotony.

    Cheers / Sadanand

    ReplyDelete
  2. Sadanand-

    No doubt scientists also exaggerate the importance of their own work. It seems likely, given that they may be slogging away for years, and suddenly a reporter shows up, it will be natural to bluster a little. In this case it is possible that Dr. Arya hinted that his work was something special and the reporter just took his word for it. But the stuff about gravity and isostacy is sheer media ignorance and reluctance to take any effort to understand concepts.

    "In case you are serious about building statistics & an index on 'Error Prone' journalism, I am willing to contribute. I guess you will soon get bored with the monotony."

    We'll stop at instance number
    65536 :-)

    cheers

    ReplyDelete