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Journal article

Quantifying groundwater‐surface water interactions in a proglacial moraine using heat and solute tracers

Abstract

Energy and mass balance methods give consistent estimates of water balance. Mass/energy balance technique is an effective tool for alpine hydrology. Groundwater dominates the water balance of the proglacial tarn. Recent studies in mountain environments have indicated that groundwater represents a major component of the water balance of alpine streams and lakes. However, the scarcity of information on the hydraulic properties of geological materials in alpine environments presents a major obstacle to understanding the response of these watersheds to hydrological inputs and their future variability. The information is particularly limited for talus and proglacial moraine, where rugged topography prohibits the installation of groundwater monitoring wells. Observation of groundwater‐surface water interaction provides a useful tool for studying groundwater in these challenging environments. Here we present a unique experiment using a tarn (i.e., pond on proglacial moraine) in a partially glaciated watershed in the Canadian Rockies as a surrogate for a groundwater monitoring well. A chloride dilution test and detailed energy balance monitoring were simultaneously conducted to quantify the groundwater‐surface water interactions. The water balance of the tarn was dominated by groundwater inflow and outflow, ranging between 70 and 720 m3 d−1, while the volume of the water in the tarn fluctuated between 140 and 620 m3. Comparing the observed flow rates with a semianalytical solution of groundwater interactions with a flow‐through pond, the hydraulic conductivity of the proglacial moraine is estimated to be in the order of 10−3 m s−1, which provides one of the very few measurements of large‐scale hydraulic conductivity of proglacial moraine. The study demonstrates a useful application of mass and energy balance measurements in rugged environments and provides the essential information for advancing our understanding of alpine groundwater hydrology.

Authors

Langston G; Hayashi M; Roy JW

Journal

Water Resources Research, Vol. 49, No. 9, pp. 5411–5426

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Publication Date

September 1, 2013

DOI

10.1002/wrcr.20372

ISSN

0043-1397

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