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The Elements of Geology by William Harmon Norton
page 58 of 414 (14%)
TOTAL AMOUNT OF UNDERGROUND WATERS. In order to realize the vast
work in solution and cementation which underground waters are now
doing and have done in all geological ages, we must gain some
conception of their amount. At a certain depth, estimated at about
six miles, the weight of the crust becomes greater than the rocks
can bear, and all cavities and pores in them must be completely
closed by the enormous pressure which they sustain. Below a depth
of even three or four miles it is believed that ground water
cannot circulate. Estimating the average pore spaces of the
different rocks of the earth's crust above this depth, and the
average per cents of their pore spaces occupied by water, it has
been recently computed that the total amount of ground water is
equal to a sheet of water one hundred feet deep, covering the
entire surface of the earth.





CHAPTER III

RIVERS AND VALLEYS


THE RUN-OFF. We have traced the history of that portion of the
rainfall which soaks into the ground; let us now return to that
part which washes along the surface and is known as the RUN-OFF.
Fed by rains and melting snows, the run-off gathers into courses,
perhaps but faintly marked at first, which join more definite and
deeply cut channels, as twigs their stems. In a humid climate the
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