Ground water aquifer in different rock system
• Igneous and metamorphic-rock aquifers can be grouped into two categories:
crystalline-rock and volcanic-rock.
• Spaces in crystalline rocks are microscopically small, few, and generally unconnected.
However, because these aquifers extend over large areas, large volumes of water can
be withdrawn. Volcanic-rock aquifers have a wide range of chemical, mineralogic,
structural, and hydraulic properties due to variations in rock type, ejection, and
deposition.
• Volcanic rocks have a wide range of chemical, mineralogic, structural, and hydraulic
properties, due mostly to variations in rock type and the way the rock was ejected and
deposited. Unaltered pyroclastic rocks, for example, might have porosity and permeability
similar to poorly sorted sediments. Hot pyroclastic material, however, might become
welded as it settles, and, thus, be almost impermeable. Silicic lavas tend to be extruded as
thick, dense flows, and they have low permeability except where they are fractured. Basaltic
lavas tend to be fluid, and, they form thin flows that have considerable pore space at the
tops and bottoms of the flows. Numerous basalt flows commonly overlap, and the flows are
separated by soil zones or alluvial material that form permeable zones. Columnar joints that
develop in the central parts of basalt flows create passages that allow water to move
vertically through the basalt. Basaltic rocks are the most productive aquifers in volcanic
rocks.
Second answer
• Igneous rocks (i.e. rocks formed from the cooling of magma) are comprised of
tightly interlocking crystals - primarily crystals of silicate minerals such as quartz,
feldspar and amphibole - which tend to be relatively insoluble. In most cases the
spaces between crystals are very small. In intrusive igneous rocks these crystals can
be quite large (> 1 mm), whereas in volcanic igneous rocks they tend to be much
smaller. Some volcanic rocks have vesicular textures caused by the exsolution of
gases. Most intrusive igneous rocks (e.g. granitic rocks) are hard and strong, and are
less likely to become fractured than other types of rocks. On the other hand, many
volcanic rocks are quite well fractured because of their relatively rapid cooling or
violent formation.
• Sedimentary rocks are formed close to the surface of the earth at relatively low
temperatures and pressures. Clastic sedimentary rocks are comprised of weathered
and transported fragments of other rocks and minerals. Depending on the degree of
sorting and rounding of those fragments, and the extent to which they are cemented
together, clastic sedimentary rocks can be quite porous. Some clastic sedimentary
rocks are also relatively soft and weak, and are easily susceptible to fracturing. Most
sedimentary rocks also have some bedding features that can enhance porosity.
Groundwater movement
1. The water cycle moves water through the environment. As water falls to the ground
as rain or snow – it can run off into streams, lakes, rivers or bays. Water will