Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Storage of water in sand rivers


Water storage in sand rivers has several advantages, such as;

1) Evaporation losses are reduced gradually to zero when the water level is 60-100cm or below the sand surface.
2) Livestock and other animals cannot contaminate the water reservoir because it is hidden under a surface of dry sand.
3) Mosquitoes, and insects that carry water-borne diseases, cannot breed in underground water reservoirs.

Water is naturally retained in the sediment of sand river channels although in a dry riverbed this is not always apparent. The water in a sand river is clean and not subject to the same amount of evaporation as an open surface dam. Sand river water supplies can be used to augment the supply of water from underground aquifers and dams, especially in remote rural areas where it is imperative that local communities are able to operate independently and maintain their own water supplies. Sand dams and subsurface dams function like sand rivers as they retain water in the sediment and reduce evaporation.

The Dabane Trust has installed simple handpump technology sand-abstraction systems at some 100 sites in Zimbabwe over a period of 14 years. The original installations put in place in 1992 are still in operation, independently managed by rural community groups.
The picture below shows the layout of a typical small-scale sand abstraction system as developed by Dabane Trust with a single home-made well-point and a flexible connecting pipe to a rower pump on the riverbank. The rower pump is situated no more than 5 metres above the saturated river sediment level and discharges water into a sump. Water is then transferred a greater distance and height by a Joma pump to a water supply point such as a water storage tank in a garden. This can be several hundred metres distant and some 8 metres higher. The Joma pump uses rower pump components in uPVC pipe work with standard pipe fittings mounted in a steel frame.

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Sand abstraction as a method of drawing water from sand rivers for domestic, livestock and irrigating small gardens using different systems has proven to be a useful method in the communal areas of zimbabwe.

The power of sand as a water source....


The Dabane Trust has installed simple handpump technology sand-abstraction systems at some 100 sites in Zimbabwe over a period of 14 years. The original installations put in place in 1992 are still in operation, independently managed by rural community groups.


The picture below shows the layout of a typical small-scale sand abstraction system as developed by Dabane Trust with a single home-made well-point and a flexible connecting pipe to a rower pump on the riverbank. The rower pump is situated no more than 5 metres above the saturated river sediment level and discharges water into a sump. Water is then transferred a greater distance and height by a Joma pump to a water supply point such as a water storage tank in a garden. This can be several hundred metres distant and some 8 metres higher. The Joma pump uses rower pump components in uPVC pipe work with standard pipe fittings mounted in a steel frame.



What is sand abstraction

Sand abstraction is a method of drawing water from sand rivers for domestic, livestock and irrigating small gardens using different systems.

Water storage in sand

Sand consists of small stone particles that originate from stones and rocks being broken down by the effects of sunshine, rains and temperature variations.
Voids, which are empty spaces, are always found between sand particles. When dry riverbeds are flooded by rains and flash-floods, the air in the voids is pressed out by the water because it is heavier than air
Coarse textured sand has larger voids that get saturated much quicker than fine sand. Therefore, much more water can be extracted from riverbeds containing coarse sand than from riverbeds with fine sand.
Fine textured sand has tiny voids that get saturated slowly with water. Only about 10% of water can be extracted from the volume of fine sand.
Coarse textured sand has larger voids and is therefore saturated much quicker than fine sand. The volume of water that can be extracted from coarse sand is about 35% of the volume of sand