Awesome Aquifers

Awesome Aquifers is a Division B event for 2011, sponsored by the Groundwater Foundation.

History
In 2005, Awesome Aquifer consisted of a setup time, a demonstration time, and a written test. Students could build their aquifer ahead of time and set it up during the setup time or build one on site during the setup time. The students then would demonstrate their project in front of judges. Scoring was based upon a predetermined rubric; a written test was used as a tiebreaker. In 2006, Awesome Aquifer was revised significantly. You are now required to build your model on site in 10 minutes. The presentation of your model counts toward the final 50% of your total score, the two tests make up the other 50%. Awesome Aquifers returned in 2007 but was taken out in the 2008 season. It returned once again in 2011. 2011 was like 2006, a 10 minute build time and a 10 minute presentation that counts toward 50% of your total score, the two tests make up the other 50%.

Stations
The event this is made up of four 10-minute stations. Most event supervisors will have you rotate from one station to the next (i.e. 1-2-3-4 or 3-4-1-2 or 2-3-4-1, etc). The four stations are:


 * 1) Vocabulary test (questions involve terminology relating to hydrogeology)
 * 2) Resource test (utilize the provided charts, graphs, and maps to answer questions)
 * 3) Building station (here you will be provided with a list of about 4-10 objectives {see list below} to design your model around - this list is what the judges will be scoring your model on. Use your time at this station to build your model aquifer and write some brief notes to help your through your presentation at station 4)
 * 4) Present your aquifer to the judges (judges will base their scores on your ability to verbally define/explain each objective on the list as well as how well you manipulate your model to visually show the objective. In addition, judges might ask a surprise question or two which will make you think on your feet)

The Basics
Awesome Aquifer is an earth science event based off ground water; because of this, it is a larger event. It takes a lot of time to learn the material and then to put it into a presentation. If you have read the beginning of the wiki you will know that there are two major parts: a test and a presentation. We are going to start with what they will most likely test you on.

Hydrologic Cycle
The Hydrologic Cycle (Water Cycle) is important for many things (besides just rain). The Water Cycle "begins" with evaporation to the atmosphere where it will condense into clouds and then rain down on the earth. It is at this point where it begins to affect us.

At the point when it hit the ground, the precipitation can do two major things. It can A. runoff the soil towards a nearby stream. or B. peculate into the ground and eventually make its way into a aquifer. Are you wondering what these bold terms mean? Runoff is water flowing over the ground towards a lake, stream or river; Peculation is water moving through cracks in rocks towards groundwater; Aquifers are underground formations that can store and release water.

Aquifers
As stated in the previous section, aquifers are underground geological structures that can store and release water. There are two main types of aquifers with pretty simple names. Confined Aquifers are aquifers that are confined between two impermeable layers (layers that do not allow water to pass through) and Unconfined Aquifers which allow water to seep/flow freely through them.

Example Objectives
This is a list of some possible objectives you might be asked to demonstrate and some suggestions on how to manipulate the model to show each one:
 * Recharge from precipitation - easiest of all things to represent, all you need is a water bottle, atomizer, spray bottle, etc. to show this.
 * Recharge from surface water bodies - we used small plastic containers (Tupperware) and drilled tiny holes at the bottom so that when we filled it with water it would be drained in about 40 seconds, just place it in top layer of rock and your ready.
 * Groundwater discharge - to surface water and wetlands - all you need for this is your original water body from 2, put small holes in sides and (after its been placed in the top layer) it will fill with water as you pour the water bottle (or other from 1) over the rocks near this, do the same thing to wetland with the wetland being represented by a sponge
 * Connection between surface water and groundwater - I always found this easier to show w/ 2 bodies of water but you can do it in a variety of ways. What I did is took the the water body from 2 and filled it with water, but on the other side had a deeper body of water with small holes in its side. As the water discharged from the first body of water it went through the aquifer to the second body of water
 * Saturated zone - some people use sponge but you don't need to, just fill the aquifer w/ enough water so that this layer (which should be one above the impermeable layer (clay) if you use it) is filled with water. I use rocks or clear beads for this layer.
 * Unsaturated zone - you can use clear beads, rock, etc. for this layer. It's right above the saturated zone and not covered in water. Make sure that water doesn't make this layer start to float.
 * Water Table - between two zones above, just use cloth or a net-like material (net-like material is good to put between all layers so they don't mix)
 * Porosity - use a large rocks and small rocks. Show the difference in the space for water and air in each. (I'm not good with this step so you can be more creative that I)
 * Permeability - use rocks and a sponge. Show that water moves faster through rocks than a sponge, cloth, or different material (you can even use a different kind of rock).
 * Wells - use materials like aquarium airline hose, drinking straws, or other narrow tubes. Add a soap pump, oral syringe or pipette to move water.
 * Well sitting - show how a well in one place works compared to a well in another place
 * Well closure - no explanation needed
 * Relationship between pumping and movement - use one of wells to show how water moves w/ the well pumping and w/o well pumping
 * Impact to SW from well - place well by SW and when doing 3 do it once w/ well pumping and once w/o. Note the difference between how much groundwater is discharged into surface water.
 * One way to contaminate groundwater - use food coloring or powered drink mix, though I wouldn't suggest red kool-aid because it is really hard to remediate.
 * Movement of contaminate in groundwater - This is where white or clear beads can come in handy so you can see contaminates movement
 * Remediation - there are tons of filters you can use, be creative and pick one that works for you. You can also use alum as another remediation technique, but you will have to run the contaminated water through a filter after you put alum into it because alum won't take the colored water away, it is just a remediation technique they use in water treatment plants.
 * Sustainable yield - quite easy, either have one partner put water in as precipitation while one takes water out through wells, or have one partner put water in as it discharges to surface water when entering aquifer

Scoring
Vocabulary test = 25%, Resource test = 25%, Presentation of model = 50%.

Score Sheet

Bring to the Competition
Competitors are allowed to bring pencils and model building materials to the event. Outside books, notes, references, etc. are not allowed. The event supervisor will provide the tests, score sheets, and objectives lists.

Presentation Skills
When you present there are some things that you need to remember:
 * Always talk slowly and clearly, enunciate!- that was the hardest thing for me so when my partner and I went through our presentation I would put gum or an M and M in the side of my mouth to help me enunciate my words.
 * Make eye contact.
 * If you have a partner work off of each other.- working with a partner is cool because you can work off each other when you present. My partner and I would switch off who was talking and who was demonstrating so that the presentation would sound better. That way if one person knows a topic better than the other it will be easier.
 * Have a script.- writing out a script with your partner will help you learn the stuff and also get your presentation in a order so it doesn't sound disorganized. Once you know the stuff you won't stick to the script, but you will use the basic format to make your presentation flow.
 * Talk about stuff that relates to the place that you are in.- when we went to nationals my partner and I mentioned stuff about the Wisconsin water system, and the differences between our states water and Wisconsin's.
 * Don't say and, or um.- it makes it seem like you don't know what you are talking about. We had a super hard time with this so we had people count the number of times we said and or um. We also had people stop us every time we would say and or um.
 * Have as many people as you can watch you present.- this will make it so you aren't nervous in front of people and then you will have different peoples opinions. The more advice you get the better.
 * Don't ever argue with your partner during the event.- when partners argue it makes them look stupid and it's annoying to sit in an event and hear people arguing.
 * Use all your time.- we would usually use all our time, but sometimes we would have a couple seconds left ad thats okay, as long as you don't have two minutes left. Go back and cover a topic again if you have extra time.
 * Always thank the judges at the end of your presentation.- its just the polite thing to do.
 * Be prepared for anything.- you don't know what's on that list of things to show and you don't know what the presentation is going to be like. The presentation could feel like a normal conversation or it could feel like a presentation on a stage so be prepared and don't let it faze you.

Links
GroundWater.org General Information

Aquifer Building

Vocabulary Help

Vocab Flash Cards