Rivers (Drainage Basin and Hydrological Cycle)
Rivers (Drainage Basin and Hydrological Cycle)
Learning Objectives
• Explain the main hydrological characteristics and processes which operate
within rivers and drainage basins.
The global water distribution/The distribution of water on Earth
Fig.1
The world’s total water supply amounts to approximately 1386cubic metres. Fig. 1
shows that 97% of water is saline and mostly located in the oceans and only 3% of
this water is fresh water that humans require to sustain life. Over two-thirds of the
fresh water is locked up in glaciers and ice caps and almost all the rest is stored as
groundwater.
Surface fresh water which is the source of water that people all around the world
consume, represents only 1% of the total fresh water available. Almost 90% of the
planet’s fresh water is stored in ice caps and lakes with the remaining 10% being held
in five other main stores. Considering rivers are the main source of water for the
world’s population, its clear that human life depends on 0.0002%of the planet’s total
water.
Drainage basins
A drainage basin is an area of land drained by a river and its tributaries.
channel
groundwater
Groundwater flow
Closed system: This is a system where water cannot be added or lost. The
hydrological cycle is known as a closed system because it includes all the water on
our planet and no water can be added to it or lost from it.
The drainage basin system
A drainage basin forms part of the hydrological cycle but unlike the hydrological cycle
it is an open system.
Open System: This is a system where water can be added or lost. A drainage basin
is known as open system because water can be added in the form of precipitation and
lost in the form of evaporation and transpiration.