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Journal ArticleDOI

Application of Distributed Temperature Sensing for coupled mapping of sedimentation processes and spatio‐temporal variability of groundwater discharge in soft‐bedded streams

TLDR
In this paper, a method is proposed to delineate potential high-groundwater discharge areas and identify deposition-induced temperature anomalies in soft-bedded streams using distributed temperature sensing data.
Abstract
The delineation of groundwater discharge areas based on Distributed Temperature Sensing (DTS) data of the streambed can be difficult in soft-bedded streams where sedimentation and scouring processes constantly change the position of the fibre optic cable relative to the streambed. Deposition-induced temperature anomalies resemble the signal of groundwater discharge while scouring will cause the cable to float in the water column and measure stream water temperatures. DTS applied in a looped layout with nine fibre optic cable rows in a 70 × 5 m section of a soft-bedded stream made it possible to detect variability in streambed temperatures between October 2011 and January 2012. Detailed monthly streambed elevation surveys were carried out to monitor the position of the fibre optic cable relative to the streambed and to quantify the effect of sedimentation processes on streambed temperatures. Based on the simultaneous interpretation of streambed temperature and elevation data, a method is proposed to delineate potential high-groundwater discharge areas and identify deposition-induced temperature anomalies in soft-bedded streams. Potential high-discharge sites were detected using as metrics the daily minimum, maximum and mean streambed temperatures as well as the daily amplitude and standard deviation of temperatures. The identified potential high-discharge areas were mostly located near the channel banks, also showing temporal variability because of the scouring and redistribution of streambed sediments, leading to the relocation of pool-riffle sequences. This study also shows that sediment deposits of 0.1 m thickness already resulted in an increase in daily minimum streambed temperatures and decrease in daily amplitude and standard deviation. Scouring sites showed lower daily minimum streambed temperatures and higher daily amplitude and standard deviation compared with areas without sedimentation and scouring. As a limitation of the approach, groundwater discharge occurring at depositional and scouring areas cannot be identified by the metrics applied. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A comparison of thermal infrared to fiber-optic distributed temperature sensing for evaluation of groundwater discharge to surface water.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors compared two increasingly common heat tracing methods to locate discrete groundwater discharge: direct contact measurements made with fiber-optic distributed temperature sensing (FO-DTS) and remote sensing measurements collected with thermal infrared (TIR) cameras.

Seasonal hyporheic temperature dynamics over riffle bedforms

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used depth-related riverbed temperature time-series in understanding hyporheic zone processes and groundwater-surface water interactions in a lowland river basin underlain by sandstone.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spatial variability in streambed hydraulic conductivity of contrasting stream morphologies: channel bend and straight channel

TL;DR: In this article, the vertical hydraulic conductivities (Kv) were calculated with in-stream permeameter tests and hydraulic heads were measured to obtain vertical head gradients at eight transects, each comprising five test locations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evaluating topography-based predictions of shallow lateral groundwater discharge zones for a boreal lake–stream system

TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluated a topography-based prediction of subsurface discharge zones along a 1500 m headwater stream reach using temperature and water isotope tracers, showing that the predicted magnitude of groundwater inflows estimated from upslope contributing area did not always agree with tracer estimates.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inferring watershed hydraulics and cold-water habitat persistence using multi-year air and stream temperature signals.

TL;DR: This study uses multi-year temperature records from 120 stream sites located across 18 mountain watersheds of Shenandoah National Park and a coastal watershed in Massachusetts to develop paired air and stream water annual temperature signal analysis techniques to elucidate the relative groundwater contribution to stream water and the effective groundwater flowpath depth.
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Journal ArticleDOI

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