Dear John,
You are right. Acre-feet was the common measure for water in
Australia. This unit was especially useful for irrigation where it
made some sense when we used acres to measure land surface areas. Acre
feet and acres are no longer used here for any official purpose
although sometimes there are remnants of the word, acre, used in non-
professional conversations.
These days, with land measured in hectares a new unit has arisen; it
is the hectare-millimetre (10 000 m^2 or 10 kL). This unit allows for
the value of agricultural produce to be compared from areas with
different rainfall. I have heard of meat production, and wool
production, measured in kilograms per hectare millimetre (kg/ha.mm).
The same quantity could be measured as kilogram per litre (kg/L). This
would then show the encapsulated water clearly but it would not allow
for the simple comparison between properties with different rainfall
as measured in millimetres. I suppose that people will choose
whichever unit (kg/ha.mm or kg/L) that suits their current political
purpose.
Cheers,
Pat Naughtin
Geelong, Australia
On 2009/04/12, at 9:06 PM, John M. Steele wrote:
Dear Pat,
Let me guess. Before metrication, they used acre-feet (at least we
do in the US).
1 acre-foot = 43560 ft³ x (0.3048 m/ft)³ = 1233.5 m³
or 1.2335 ML or 1.2335 dam³. So it is an "almost familiar" size unit.
The agricultural section of SAE recommends the cubic dekameter
wherever acre-foot is now used (although I have never heard anyone
in the US actually use it).
--- On Sun, 4/12/09, Pat Naughtin
<pat.naugh...@metricationmatters.com> wrote:
From: Pat Naughtin <pat.naugh...@metricationmatters.com>
Subject: [USMA:44604] Re: Fw: Re: Water, teraliters, was FPLA 2010
To: "U.S. Metric Association" <usma@colostate.edu>
Date: Sunday, April 12, 2009, 3:03 AM
Dear John,
Thanks for the correction. I simply cut and pasted the article
without reading it carefully. I will watch the 'Geelong Advertiser'
more closely in future.
By the way, the few water engineers that I know have developed a
mindset where the unit megalitre is used for capacities and they
have a sense of how big the dams in our system are, see http://www.barwonwater.vic.gov.au/index.cfm?h2o=services.water_levels
, and they don't see a need to convert between megalitres and cubic
measures of any kind; they just develop their megalitre mindset and
then base their reference values using that unit.
Another aspect to the use of megalitres is that there is no fear of
large numbers. Water engineers, like many others, have simply chosen
a unit where almost all, if not all, of the values they use daily
are in whole numbers, which is one of the great strengths of the
metric system. It is possible to choose prefixes for units so that
there is never any need for fractions at all. See http://www.metricationmatters.com/docs/WholeNumberRule.pdf
for some further thoughts on this issue.
Cheers,
Pat Naughtin
Geelong, Australia
On 2009/04/12, at 12:22 AM, John M. Steele wrote:
Indeed, there is a prefix error. This "facts & figures" page
http://www.barwonwater.vic.gov.au/cms/serveDoc.cfm?docId=24911
indicates Barwon water supplies 32000 ML of water annually,
processes 21000 ML of sewage, and serves 270000 customers (that is
apparently population, as household connections is less than half
that, 131000). Thus average household use is therefore around 244
m³ per year.
A thousand-fold error should cause a "whoa, wait a minute"
response. I believe the fact that it didn't is adequate evidence
that megaliters, gigaliters, and teraliters (even with "re"
spelling) are not very intuitive units and throw a great cloud of
confusion over any attempt to visualize or sanity check the
amount. Any form of proper cubic measure, from 32 x 10^6 m³, 32
million cubic meters, 32000 dam³, 32 hm³, would be a more suitable
way to convey this information, and be less likely to obscure a
thousand-fold error.
Teraliters are frightening.
--- On Sat, 4/11/09, John M. Steele <jmsteele9...@sbcglobal.net>
wrote:
From: John M. Steele <jmsteele9...@sbcglobal.net>
Subject: Re: [USMA:44564] Re: FPLA 2010
To: "U.S. Metric Association" <usma@colostate.edu>,
pat.naugh...@metricationmatters.com
Date: Saturday, April 11, 2009, 8:59 AM
You have proven megaliters, gigaliters, and teraliters are used.
That is a staggering amount of water given Geelong's population.
Where does it all go? Irrigation? If I compare with Detroit,
private consumption and industry can't account for much.
A volume of 32 TL/annum meant absolutely nothing to me, a
completely incomprehensible number. Some manipulation led me to it
being 32 km³ per year, giving me some sense of what you do to the
river. It also works out to a withdrawal of 1015 m³/s.
It still seemed large, so I compared it to the Detroit River (part
of the connection between Lake Huron and Lake Erie, and the Detroit
Water Dept, which serves a metro region of about 5 million people.
The Detroit River flow varies typically from 4500 m³/s in low lake
level years to 6500 m³/s in high lake level years. The Detroit
Water department handles an average of 673 million gallons per day,
by their figures. Converting, this is 0.93 TL (or km³) per year
(29.5 m³/s) for 5 million people. That figure is reasonably
consistent with my household use of 273 m³/year)
As we use less than 1/32 the water for about 25X the population (is
Geelong under 200,000?), I wonder if there isn't a prefix error in
that news article. (If it isn't an error, you guys need more
conservation effort!)
--- On Sat, 4/11/09, Pat Naughtin <pat.naugh...@metricationmatters.com
> wrote:
From: Pat Naughtin <pat.naugh...@metricationmatters.com>
Subject: [USMA:44564] Re: FPLA 2010
To: "U.S. Metric Association" <usma@colostate.edu>
Date: Saturday, April 11, 2009, 12:00 AM
On 2009/04/11, at 1:35 PM, Jeremiah MacGregor wrote:
I can see where the terms megalitre, gigalitre and teralitre would
be less cumbersome for the public then their equivalents of cubic
dekametres, cubic hectometres and cubic kilometres.
Dear Jerry and Stan,
Here is an example of the use of gigalitres from our local paper,
The Geelong Advertiser, from October last year. Barwon Water is our
local water supply organisation as we get most of our water from
the Barwon river.
http://www.geelongadvertiser.com.au/article/
2008/10/24/26151_news.html
Cheers,
Pat Naughtin
PO Box 305 Belmont 3216,
Geelong, Australia
Phone: 61 3 5241 2008
Metric system consultant, writer, and speaker, Pat Naughtin, has
helped thousands of people and hundreds of companies upgrade to the
modern metric system smoothly, quickly, and so economically that
they now save thousands each year when buying, processing, or
selling for their businesses. Pat provides services and resources
for many different trades, crafts, and professions for commercial,
industrial and government metrication leaders in Asia, Europe, and
in the USA. Pat's clients include the Australian Government,
Google, NASA, NIST, and the metric associations of Canada, the UK,
and the USA. See http://www.metricationmatters.com for more
metrication information, contact Pat at pat.naugh...@metricationmatters.com
or to get the free 'Metrication matters' newsletter go to: http://www.metricationmatters.com/newsletter
to subscribe.
Pat Naughtin
PO Box 305 Belmont 3216,
Geelong, Australia
Phone: 61 3 5241 2008
Metric system consultant, writer, and speaker, Pat Naughtin, has
helped thousands of people and hundreds of companies upgrade to the
modern metric system smoothly, quickly, and so economically that
they now save thousands each year when buying, processing, or
selling for their businesses. Pat provides services and resources
for many different trades, crafts, and professions for commercial,
industrial and government metrication leaders in Asia, Europe, and
in the USA. Pat's clients include the Australian Government, Google,
NASA, NIST, and the metric associations of Canada, the UK, and the
USA. See http://www.metricationmatters.com for more metrication
information, contact Pat at pat.naugh...@metricationmatters.com or
to get the free 'Metrication matters' newsletter go to: http://www.metricationmatters.com/newsletter
to subscribe.
Pat Naughtin
PO Box 305 Belmont 3216,
Geelong, Australia
Phone: 61 3 5241 2008
Metric system consultant, writer, and speaker, Pat Naughtin, has
helped thousands of people and hundreds of companies upgrade to the
modern metric system smoothly, quickly, and so economically that they
now save thousands each year when buying, processing, or selling for
their businesses. Pat provides services and resources for many
different trades, crafts, and professions for commercial, industrial
and government metrication leaders in Asia, Europe, and in the USA.
Pat's clients include the Australian Government, Google, NASA, NIST,
and the metric associations of Canada, the UK, and the USA. See http://www.metricationmatters.com
for more metrication information, contact Pat at pat.naugh...@metricationmatters.com
or to get the free 'Metrication matters' newsletter go to: http://www.metricationmatters.com/newsletter
to subscribe.