Ground water is the largest and most readily
available source of potable water in Florida. Hydrogeology
is the study of ground water with emphasis given to its
chemistry, modes of movement, and relation to the geologic
environment. Hydrogeology integrates geology, hydrology,
chemistry, physics, mathematics, biology, and engineering to
understand the occurrence and movement of water in the
complex subsurface environment.
Water-bearing sedimentary rocks in Florida can
generally be divided into two types: siliciclastics (sands,
silts, clays) or carbonates (limestone and dolostone). All
of these rocks, no matter how "hard" or solid they appear,
contain some voids or pores, which may contain water. Two
properties that are common to all these rocks, and which
control the movement of their ground water, are porosity and
permeability. Porosity and permeability are intimately
related. Porosity refers to the pores themselves, while
permeability is a measure of a rock's ability to allow
fluids to move through its pores. For a rock to be
permeable, its pores must be interconnected so that water
can move freely.
Aquifers are subsurface zones of rocks that
yield water in sufficient quantities to be economically
useful for society's activities. Aquifers are classified as
either unconfined, semi-confined, or confined, depending on
the physical conditions under which the water is contained
in an aquifer's rocks. Florida has all three types of
aquifers in various combinations throughout the state. The
Floridan aquifer system (FAS), which underlies all of
Florida, is the main source of potable ground water for much
of the state. However, in the extreme western panhandle and
in south Florida the FAS is either too deep or contains
water of poor quality.
Suggested Reading
-
Hydrogeology Current Projects
-
SEGS Ad Hoc Committee, 1986, Hydrogeological units of Florida:
Florida Geological Survey Special Publication 28, 8 p.
- Lane, E., 1986, Karst in Florida: Florida Geological
Survey Special Publication 29, 100 p.
- Scott, T.M., Lloyd, J.M., and Maddox, G. (eds.), 1991,
Florida's ground-water quality monitoring program,
hydrogeological framework: Florida Geological Survey Special
Publication 32, 97 p.
- Maddox, G.L., Lloyd, J.M., Scott, T.M., Upchurch, S.B.,
and Copeland, R. (eds.), 1992, Florida's ground-water
quality monitoring program, background hydrogeochemistry:
Florida Geological Survey Special Publication 34, 362 p.