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Hydrology
The cycle.
The science of hydrology deals with
the properties, distribution, and circulation of water on
the surface of land, in the soil and underlying rocks, and
in the atmosphere. The hydrologic cycle
is the continual flow of water from the ocean to the atmosphere,
then to the land, and after several delays, back to the
atmosphere.
Nearly every human enterprise
on land modifies the hydrologic cycle in some way. When
plowing land, cutting forests, building dams and reservoirs,
draining swamps and wetlands, creating cities, and paving
highways, the exchange of moisture between land and atmosphere
is altered. By adding pollutants to the atmosphere
precipitation patterns are modified.
In day-to-day living hydrology
may not be on the minds of West Virginians and visitors
here but water certainly is. Rain is common, it flows
downhill, and everyone is surrounded by hills and mountains.
Wild and beautiful streams and rivers make their
way through lush, verdant forests and thickets of rhododendron
and mountain laurel. The waters are an angler's paradise,
a gift to whitewater adventurers and kayakers, and a retreat
for those seeking solitude.
West Virginia has 32 hydrologic
zones encompassing 342 separate watersheds. To view
a color map of these and obtain information click on the
web site http://www2.ruralnet.wvu.edu/...

Last updated on Tuesday, July 25, 2000
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