Scaling up of Geophysical Data to Address Critical Zone Science Questions

Thursday, 27 July 2017: 9:00 AM-12:00 PM
Paul Brest West (Munger Conference Center)
Convener:  Kamini Singha, Colorado School of Mines, Golden, CO, United States
9:00 AM
Hydrology at the Continental Scale: Evaluating Groundwater Surface Water Interactions Across the U.S. with an Integrated Hydrologic Model (Invited) (204408)
Laura E Condon, Syracuse University, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Syracuse, NY, United States and Reed M Maxwell, Colorado School of Mines, Hydrologic Science and Engineering Program and Department of Geology and Geological Engineering, Golden, CO, United States
9:25 AM
Groundwater management in Denmark: downscaling decision objectives and upscaling uncertainty models (Invited) (204572)
Jef Caers, Stanford Earth Sciences, Stanford, CA, United States
9:50 AM
Introduction to Posters
 
Field Representative Elementary Volume (FREV) for Water Content in Regularly Irrigated Soils: A Case Study in an Arid Loamy-Sand Soil. (204495)
Effi Tripler, Central and Northern Arava R&D, Soil and Water Sci., Sapir, Israel, Yechezkel Mualem, Central and Northern Arava R&D, Soil and Water Sci., Rehovot, Israel and Uri Shani, The Hebrew University of jerusalem, Soil and Water Sci., Rehovot, Israel
 
GPR full-waveform inversion at different scales to image the critical zone (204478)
Anja Klotzsche, Nils Gueting, Jessica Schmaeck, Harry Vereecken and Jan Van Der Kruk, Agrosphere (IBG-3), Institute of Bio- and Geosciences, Forschungszentrum Jülich, Juelich, Germany
 
Electrical resistivity imaging to link evapotranspiration and groundwater fluxes in the critical zone (204527)
Ryan Harmon1, Daphne J. Szutu2, Jackie Randall1, Holly R Barnard3 and Kamini Singha1, (1)Colorado School of Mines, Golden, CO, United States, (2)University of California Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, United States, (3)University of Colorado at Boulder, Boulder, CO, United States
 
Efficient and Transparent Construction of 3D Hydro-stratigraphy from Geophysical and Geological Data (204484)
Anders Vest Christiansen1, Troels N Vilhelmsen1, Esben Auken1, Nikolaj Foged1 and Pernille Aabye Marker2, (1)Aarhus University, Department of Geoscience, Aarhus C, Denmark, (2)Technical University of Denmark, Department of Environmental Engineering, Lyngby, Denmark
 
An Enabling Software Framework For Monitoring and Modeling Hydro Geophysical Processes in The Critical Zone Across Different Spatial And Temporal Scales (204496)
Roelof Versteeg1, Baptiste Dafflon2, Emmanuel Leger2, Mike van der Werf3, Marco de Kleine3, Marios Karaoulis3, Haiyan Zhou1, Anastasia Rodzianko1, Doug Val Johnson1 and Haruko M Wainwright2, (1)Subsurface Insights, Hanover, NH, United States, (2)Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA, United States, (3)Deltares, Delft, Netherlands
 
Monitoring, Scaling and Predicting Interactions Across Critical Zone Compartments using Geophysical Data (204218)
Susan S. Hubbard, Haruko M Wainwright, Anh Phuong Tran, Emmanuel Leger, Yuxin Wu and Baptiste Dafflon, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA, United States
 
Mapping Permafrost Features that Influence the Hydrological Processes in the two forked valley in the Source Area of the Yellow River (SAYR), NE Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, China (204360)
Shuhui Gao1,2, Huijun Jin1, Dongliang Luo2 and Qingfeng Wang2, (1)Chinese Academy of Sciences, State Key Laboratory of Frozen Soils Engineering, Beijing, China, (2)Northwest Institute of Eco-Environment and Resources, Chinese Academy of Sciences, State Key Laboratory of Frozen Soil Engineering, Lanzhou, China
 
The Prediction-Focused Approach: an Opportunity for Hydrogeophysical Data Integration and Interpretation in the Critical Zone (204227)
Thomas Hermans1,2, Frederic Nguyen1, Maria Klepikova3, Alain Dassargues1 and Jef Caers4, (1)University of Liege, Urban and Environmental Engineering, Liege, Belgium, (2)Stanford University, Stanford, CA, United States, (3)ETH Zurich, Geological Institute, Zurich, Switzerland, (4)Stanford Earth Sciences, Stanford, CA, United States
10:30 AM
Break with Posters Available
10:45 AM
Poster Viewing and Discussion
 
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