Water
Filtration in Karst Areas
Objectives:
Students
will:
- investigate to
what extent water is filtered through different rock types.
- define porosity
and permeability.
- examine how caves
and sinkholes direct water flow.
- analyze why groundwater
in karst areas is at greater risk of contamination.
- identify several
sources of pollution.
Materials:
- 2 2-liter clear
plastic soda bottles with bottoms cut off (the bottles from "Getting
the Groundwater Picture" can be used.)
- 3 squares of
flexible nylon screening (~3 inches of screening from a screen door
would work)
- 2 rubber bands
- A small piece
of cheesecloth or pantyhose squares of flexible nylon screening (~3
inches)
- Large pebbles
(about 4 cups)
- Small pebbles
(about 4 cups)
- Coarse sand
(about 4 cups)
- 2 large, graduated
beakers (500 ml)
- 1 4-inch piece
of 1-inch diameter flexible plastic tubing (piece of garden hose)
- 1 small funnel
(~3 inch diameter, with stem that fits into tubing)
- Rain cans (tin
cans with holes in the bottom)
- ½ cup vegetable
oil
- ½ cup coffee
grounds
- Red food coloring
- Pitchers or
other containers to mix "contaminated water" (preferably clear)
- Photographs
of sinkhole plains and polluted sinkholes
Procedure:
To keep the
cave location a secret, steps 1-4 should be completed without student
involvement.
- With a rubber
band, secure a piece of nylon screemomg (cheesecloth will work) over
the mouth of each 2-liter bottle.
- Set the bottles,
inverted, in the empty beakers or jars. Label them "#1" and "#2."
- Fill each bottle
with identical rock layers. Start with large pebbles, then add a layer
of small pebbles. In one bottle, bury tubing in the layer of small pebbles
(see figure). Cover the top opening of the tubing with a square of nylon
mesh or pantyhose (tie a string onto the rubber band holding the square
for easy removal later - hide the string). This becomes the secret cave.
Finish with a thin layer of sand.
- Mix up three different
"pollutant" types and label the containers:
- ½ cup vegetable
oil with 6 cups of water ("Oil")
- ½ cup coffee
with 6 cups of water ("Sewage")
- several drops
of food coloring with 6 cups of water ("Pesticides/Herbicides")
- During class discuss
the "rock types" in the bottles. Which type is the most porous? Permeable?
Tell them that the rocks represent limestone and sandstone. The limestone
is very permeable and cracked. Sandstone is very porous. Ask students
how porosity and permeability may affect filtration. If porosity and
permeability are new concepts, write the definitions on the board.
- Tell students that
one bottle contains a cave, while the other does not. Ask them which
rock layer most likely contains the cave. Review the definition of karst.
Have students predict which bottle will act as a better filter.
- Show the students
the containers of contaminated water. Discuss how water can become polluted.
What happens when rain falls on a parking lot? Where does the oil go?
Discuss how water can become brown and cloudy. What does the water look
like that runs off of a cow pasture? What if a septic tank leaked? Where
would the sewage go? What happens to pesticides when it rains soon after
pesticides are applied? Remember, not all pesticides contaminate the
water. (For questions on this topic, consult your county extension agent.)
- Have two volunteers
assist you. Give each student 2 cups of the coffee water in the rain
cans. Have each student hold their water over the bottles as it slowly
sinks in and time the drainage. When water stops dripping into the beakers,
show them to the class. Which bottle acted as a better filter? Which
beaker contains more water? If one or both beakers contains less than
2 cups of water, where did the rest go? Were the results different for
the two bottles? Have students record the results on the attached worksheet.
- Pour out the beakers.
Repeat step 8 using oily water, then red water.
- Ask students which
bottle contains a cave. How do they know?
- Remove the nylon
screen from the tubing. Fit the small funnel into the tubing and tell
the class that the funnel represents a sinkhole. Define sinkholes. Show
the class the pictures of sinkhole plains. Cover the funnel with the
nylon screen and a thin layer of sand.
- Have a student
pour 2 cups of coffee water into the "karst" bottle. Discuss the results.
Repeat with the oily and red water.
- Discuss how water
is filtered as it passes through rock. How well is water filtered in
karst areas? Would pollution be of greater concern in a karst area,
or a non-karst area? Were the pesticides filtered out in either bottle?
- Show students the
picture(s) of polluted sinkholes. Why might it be a bad idea to throw
trash into sinkholes?
- Water
Filtration Worksheet
This activity is
available as an Adobe PDF.
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Pollution
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