Poster Session

Monday, October 5, 2015: 4:00 PM-7:00 PM
Primary Convener:  James J Butler Jr, University of Kansas, Kansas Geological Survey, Lawrence, KS, United States
Conveners:  Jaime Gómez-Hernández, Polytechnic University of Valencia, Valencia, Spain and Aldo Fiori, Universita' di Roma Tre, Dipartimento di Ingegneria, Rome, Italy
 
M-1
Can local ADE-based models predict contaminant breakthrough? (48282)
Duane R Hampton, Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, MI, United States and Wei-Shyuan "Stone" Peng, Horizon Environmental Corp., Grand Rapids, MI, United States
 
M-2
Goal-Oriented Site Characterization: High Permeability Zones and Preferential Flow Paths (59237)
Bradley Harken1,2, Uwe Schneidewind3, Thomas Kalbacher1, Yoram Rubin2 and Peter Dietrich1, (1)Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research UFZ Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany, (2)University of California Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, United States, (3)Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium
 
M-3
Comparison of the Classical Advection Dispersion Equation and a Temporally Nonlocal Version of the Advection Dispersion Equation to Model Solute Transport in Highly Heterogeneous Media at the Macrodispersion Experiment (MADE) Site. (59309)
Savannah Miller, Colorado School of Mines, Golden, CO, United States and David Andrew Benson, Colorado School of Mines, Hydrologic Science and Engineering, Golden, CO, United States
 
M-4
Quantification of Anomalous Transport in Correlated Heterogeneous Media Using Coupled Continuous Time Random Walks (38277)
Alessandro Comolli, CSIC, IDAEA, Barcelona, Spain; Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, Geotechnical Engineering and Geosciences, Barcelona, Spain and Marco Dentz, IDAEA-CSIC, Barcelona, Spain
 
M-5
Turbulent Hyporheic Exchange in Permeable Sediments (59211)
Kevin R Roche, Northwestern University, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Evanston, IL, United States, Antoine F Aubeneau, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN, United States and Aaron Ian Packman, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, United States
 
M-6
Prediction of Solute Concentration in the Presence of Uncertainty: beyond Moments (59151)
Francesca Boso, University of Calif San Diego, La Jolla, CA, United States and Daniel M Tartakovsky, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA, United States
 
M-7
Time-scale-dependent analysis of multiple-peaked breakthrough curves obtained in weakly stratified aquifers (48158)
Christophe C Frippiat1, Philippe Meus2 and Mathieu Veschkens1, (1)Institut Scientifique de Service Public, Liège, Belgium, (2)European Water Tracing Services, Nandrin, Belgium
 
M-8
Small Time Asymptotics of Solute Transport at High Peclet Number and the Effect on Velocity Correlation (48290)
Nicole Lyn Sund1, Diogo Bolster1 and David Andrew Benson2, (1)University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN, United States, (2)Colorado School of Mines, Hydrologic Science and Engineering, Golden, CO, United States
 
M-9
Topological characteristics and channel properties of porous media that underpin anomalous transport (48250)
Veronica L Morales1, Markus Holzner1, Matthias Willmann1, Marco Dentz2, Francisco J Perez-reche3 and Iwan Jerjen4, (1)Institute for Umweltingenieurwissenschaften, Zuerich, Switzerland, (2)IDAEA-CSIC, Barcelona, Spain, (3)University of Aberdeen, Department of Physics, Aberdeen, United Kingdom, (4)Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology, Dubendorf, Switzerland
 
Development of an effective advection-dispersion-reaction equation involving chemical mixing (48253)
Brian D. Wood, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR, United States; Oregon State University, School of Chemical, Biological, and Environmental Engineering, Corvallis, OR, United States
 
Point mixing rate potential in heterogeneous velocity fields (48274)
Tomás Aquino and Diogo Bolster, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN, United States
 
Advective Mass Transport through Porous Media Taking Based on Hydrodynamic Dispersion (48176)
Vikenti Gorokhovski, independent hydrogeologist, Athens, GA, United States
 
A Stochastic Approach to Characterize Discrete Fracture Network Patterns of Heterogeneous Media (48285)
Mohammadreza Jalali, Santos Jiménez Parras, Mark Somogyvari and Peter Bayer, ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
 
Dynamic Unstructured Mesh Optimization for Improved Modelling of Flow and Transport in Highly Heterogeneous Aquifers (48174)
Matthew Jackson, Pablo Salinas, James R Percival, Dimitrios Pavlidis, Christopher Pain, Hossam Osman, Alexander Adam, Carl Jacquemyn, Gerard Gorman and Gary Hampson, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom
 
Hydrological modeling of transport phenomena at the Landscape Evolution Observatory (38287)
Carlotta Scudeler1,2, Luke A Pangle3, Damiano Pasetto1, Guo-Yue Niu3, Claudio Paniconi2, Mario Putti1 and Peter A A Troch3, (1)University of Padua, Department of Mathematics, Padua, Italy, (2)Institut National de la Recherche Scientifique-Eau Terre Environnement INRS-ETE, Quebec City, QC, Canada, (3)University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, United States
 
Numerical Simulation of Solute Transport in Groundwater Flow System (48255)
Nilkanth Hanmantrao Kulkarni, Shri Guru Gobind Singhji Institute of Engineering & Technology, Nanded, Civil Engineering, Nanded, India
 
Modeling Remediation of a Polluted Aquifer in Israel (59605)
Ziv Moreno1, Amir Paster1, Gedeon Dagan1, Alexander Yakirevich2 and Mikhail Kouznetsov2, (1)Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel, (2)Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer Sheva, Israel
 
Advective and diffusive contaminant transport through heterogeneous sandy-clay formation (48203)
Sergey P Pozdniakov1, Veronika A. Bakshevskaia2 and Vladimir Lekhov1, (1)Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia, (2)Water Problems Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia
 
Effect of large earthquakes on groundwater transport (38288)
Chi-Yuen Wang and Michael Manga, University of California Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, United States
 
Chasing the tracer - combining conventional salt tracer testing with Direct Push electrical conductivity logging for the characterization of a highly permeable fluviatile aquifer (38289)
Thomas Vienken1, Peter Huggenberger2, Emanuel Huber2, Manuel Kreck1 and Peter Dietrich1, (1)Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research UFZ Leipzig, Department Monitoring and Exploration Technologies, Leipzig, Germany, (2)University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland
 
Direct push driven in situ color logging tool for high resolution characterization of soils and unconsolidated sediments (48157)
Joerg Hausmann, Thomas Vienken, Ulrike Werban and Peter Dietrich, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research UFZ Leipzig, Department Monitoring and Exploration Technologies, Leipzig, Germany
 
Quantifying Impacts of Solute Transport on Time Lapse ERT at a Michigan Ecotone (59158)
Alexandria Kuhl and David W Hyndman, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, United States
 
Preliminary Testing of a Streambed PVP, and its Application to Groundwater-Surface Water Interactions in a Stream in Jutland, Denmark (59567)
Mackenzie Cremeans and John F Devlin, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS, United States
 
Assessing Suitability of Hand Drilling Techniques for Abstracting Shallow Alluvial Aquifers along River Benue Floodplain, North Eastern Nigeria (38276)
Buba Ankidawa Sr., Senior Lecturer, Agric. & Environmental Engineering, School of Engineering & Engineering Technology, Yola, Adamawa State, Nigeria
 
Modelling Non-Linear Spatial Dependence with Applications to MADE Hydraulic Conductivity Data (48019)
Claus P Haslauer, University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany and Geoffrey Bohling, Univ Kansas, Kansas Geological Survey, Lawrence, KS, United States
 
Bridging Multiple-point Geostatistics and Parameter Estimation for Better Flow and Transport Modeling (48127)
Liangping Li1, Sanjay Srinivasan1, Haiyan Zhou1 and Jaime Gómez-Hernández2, (1)University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, United States, (2)Polytechnic University of Valencia, Valencia, Spain
 
Joint characterization of non-Gaussian hydraulic conductivities and non-Gaussian porosities by the normal-score ensemble Kalman filter (48133)
Teng Xu, Universitat Politècnica de València, Research Institute for Water and Environmental Engineering, VALENCIA, Spain and Jaime Gómez-Hernández, Polytechnic University of Valencia, Valencia, Spain
 
Assimilation of Contamination Data for the Hydrogeological Characterization of a Heterogeneous Aquifer (48276)
Veronique Bouzaglou and Erwan Gloaguen, Institut national de recherche scientifique, Eau Terre Environnement, Quebec, QC, Canada
 
Inverse flow and transport modelling to understand contaminant transport experiments in a highly heterogeneous shear zone at the Grimsel Test Site in Switzerland (48205)
Lindsay A Mcmillan, Alan W Herbert and Michael S Riley, University of Birmingham, School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences, Birmingham, United Kingdom
 
Stochastic inverse tomography of highly heterogeneous aquifers (48060)
Daniel O'Malley, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Computational Earth Sciences, Los Alamos, NM, United States and Velimir V Vesselinov, LANL, Santa Fe, NM, United States
 
Characterizing the Hydraulic Conductivity of the Biscayne Aquifer of South Florida (48201)
Michael C Sukop, Florida International University, Earth and Environment, Miami, FL, United States and Kevin J Cunningham, U.S. Geological Survey, Davie, FL, United States
 
Harmonic analysis of hydrogeological time-series: a new high-resolution method to characterize highly heterogeneous coastal aquifers (48112)
Anli Bourhane, Water Office Reunion, Water Resources, Saint Denis, France, Emmanuel Cordier, University of La Reunion, Observatoire des Sciences de l'Univers, Saint Denis, France and Jean-Lambert Join, University of La Réunion, Laboratory Geosciences Reunion, Saint-Denis, France
 
Characterizing Heterogeneous Groundwater Discharge in the Headwaters of the White River, Manistee National Forest, Michigan (59160)
Chanse M Ford1, Duane R Hampton1 and Paul K Doss2, (1)Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, MI, United States, (2)Univ Southern Indiana, Evansville, IN, United States
 
Coupled Effects of Hyporheic Flow Structure and Biogeochemical Heterogeneity on Nutrient Dynamics in Rivers (59541)
Angang Li1, Antoine F Aubeneau2, Diogo Bolster2, Jennifer L. Tank2 and Aaron Ian Packman1, (1)Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, United States, (2)University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN, United States
 
The Groundwater Flow Patterns Associated with the Formation of the Truth or Consequences, New Mexico Geothermal Resource (59218)
Jeff Pepin1, Mark Austin Person1, Fred M Phillips1, Shari Kelley2, Stacy Timmons3, Lara Owens4, James C Witcher5 and Carl W Gable6, (1)New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology, Socorro, NM, United States, (2)New Mexico Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources, Socorro, NM, United States, (3)Aquifer Mapping Program, New Mexico Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources, Socorro, NM, United States, (4)Ormat Technologies, Inc, Reno, NV, United States, (5)Witcher and Associates, Las Cruces, NM, United States, (6)Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM, United States
 
Parameter Estimation in Coastal Phreatic Aquifer near Mukka (Karnataka, India) (48216)
Priyanka B N, Indian Institute of Science, Civil Engineering, Bangalore, India, MS Mohan Kumar, Indian Institute of Science, Civil Engineering and Indo-French Cell for Water Sciences, Bangalore, India and Amai Mahesha, National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Applied Mechanics and Hydraulics, Surathkal, Mangalore, India
 
Geo-fluid model formation groundwater OF petroleum horizons Western megablock of the West Siberian megabasin (48260)
Rimma Abdrashitova, Tyumen State Oil and Gas University, Department of Geology Oil and Gas, Tyumen, Russia and GEO-FLUID MODEL FORMATION GROUNDWATER OF PETROLEUM HORIZONS WESTERN MEGABLOCK OF THE WEST SIBERIAN MEGABASIN
 
Joint Impact of Fracture Topography and Aperture Distribution on Flow and Transport (48278)
Daniel Vogler1, Stuart D Walsh2, Florian Amann1 and Peter Bayer1, (1)ETH Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland, (2)Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, CA, United States
 
Investigating the aperture of hydraulically conductive fractures in crystalline rock by electrical means. (48207)
Martin Löfgren, Niressa, Solute transport division, Norsborg, Sweden
 
Modelling flow and transport in a granitic rock, with focus on the sub metre scale (48236)
Urban Svensson, Computer-aided Fluid Engineering AB (CFE AB), Karlskrona, Sweden
 
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