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Titel |
Continental hydrosystem modelling: the concept of nested stream-aquifer interfaces |
VerfasserIn |
N. Flipo, A. Mouhri, B. Labarthe, S. Biancamaria, A. Rivière, P. Weill |
Medientyp |
Artikel
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Sprache |
Englisch
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ISSN |
1027-5606
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Digitales Dokument |
URL |
Erschienen |
In: Hydrology and Earth System Sciences ; 18, no. 8 ; Nr. 18, no. 8 (2014-08-21), S.3121-3149 |
Datensatznummer |
250120441
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Publikation (Nr.) |
copernicus.org/hess-18-3121-2014.pdf |
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Zusammenfassung |
Coupled hydrological-hydrogeological models, emphasising the importance of
the stream–aquifer interface, are more and more used in hydrological
sciences for pluri-disciplinary studies aiming at investigating environmental
issues. Based on an extensive literature review, stream–aquifer interfaces
are described at five different scales: local [10 cm–~10 m], intermediate [~10 m–~1 km],
watershed [10 km2–~1000 km2], regional
[10 000 km2–~1 M km2] and continental scales
[>10 M km2]. This led us to develop the concept of nested
stream–aquifer interfaces, which extends the well-known vision of nested
groundwater pathways towards the surface, where the mixing of low frequency
processes and high frequency processes coupled with the complexity of
geomorphological features and heterogeneities creates hydrological
spiralling. This conceptual framework allows the identification of a
hierarchical order of the multi-scale control factors of stream–aquifer
hydrological exchanges, from the larger scale to the finer scale. The
hyporheic corridor, which couples the river to its 3-D hyporheic zone, is then
identified as the key component for scaling hydrological processes occurring
at the interface. The identification of the hyporheic corridor as the support
of the hydrological processes scaling is an important step for the
development of regional studies, which is one of the main concerns for water
practitioners and resources managers.
In a second part, the modelling of the stream–aquifer interface at various
scales is investigated with the help of the conductance model. Although the
usage of the temperature as a tracer of the flow is a robust method for the
assessment of stream–aquifer exchanges at the local scale, there is
a crucial need to develop innovative methodologies for assessing
stream–aquifer exchanges at the regional scale. After formulating the
conductance model at the regional and intermediate scales, we address this
challenging issue with the development of an iterative modelling methodology,
which ensures the consistency of stream–aquifer exchanges between the
intermediate and regional scales.
Finally, practical recommendations are provided for the study of the
interface using the innovative methodology MIM
(Measurements–Interpolation–Modelling), which is graphically developed,
scaling in space the three pools of methods needed to fully understand
stream–aquifer interfaces at various scales. In the MIM space,
stream–aquifer interfaces that can be studied by a given approach are
localised. The efficiency of the method is demonstrated with two examples.
The first one proposes an upscaling framework, structured around river
reaches of ~10–100 m, from the local to the watershed scale. The second
example highlights the usefulness of space borne data to improve the
assessment of stream–aquifer exchanges at the regional and continental
scales. We conclude that further developments in modelling and field
measurements have to be undertaken at the regional scale to enable a proper
modelling of stream–aquifer exchanges from the local to the continental scale. |
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