H33C-1601
Multi-Scale Observation of Time-Variable Interactions of a Stream and its Valley Bottom During a Storm Event

Wednesday, 16 December 2015
Poster Hall (Moscone South)
Jase Hixson, Student, School of Public and Environmental Affairs, Bloomington, IN, United States, Adam S Ward, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA, United States and Noah Schmadel, Indiana University Bloomington, SPEA, Bloomington, IN, United States
Abstract:
The exchange of water and solutes across the stream-hyporheic-riparian-hillslope continuum is controlled by the interaction of dynamic hydrological processes with the underlying geological setting. Our current understanding of exchange processes is primarily based on field observations collected during baseflow conditions, with few studies considering time-variable stream-aquifer interactions during storm events. We completed ten sets of four in-stream tracer slug injections during and after a large storm event in a headwater catchment at the H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest, Oregon. The injections were performed in three adjacent 50-meter study reaches, enabling comparison of spatial heterogeneity in transport processes. Reach-scale data demonstrate apparent trends with discharge in both transient storage and long-term storage (commonly “channel water balance”). Comparison of flowpath-scale observations from a network of monitoring wells to reach-scale observations showed that the advective timescale changed with discharge making it difficult to infer process from simple, reach-scale tracer studies. Overall, our results highlight the opportunities and challenges for interpretation of multi-scale solute tracer data along the stream-hyporheic-riparian-hillslope continuum.