Effects of season and man-made changes on baseflow and flow recession: case studies

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschung

Standard

Effects of season and man-made changes on baseflow and flow recession: case studies. / Wittenberg, Hartmut.
in: Hydrological Processes, Jahrgang 17, Nr. 11, 15.08.2003, S. 2113-2123.

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschung

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{ca2a7221a34b43e2b10e53ca56ef88b0,
title = "Effects of season and man-made changes on baseflow and flow recession: case studies",
abstract = "Discharge hydrographs of rivers carry the cumulated information on the various hydrological processes in catchments and the influences imposed on them. From the analysis of observed baseflow recessions, direct and groundwater flow can be separated and time series of the main components of the underlying groundwater balance, namely discharge, evapotranspiration losses, abstractions, storage and recharge, can be derived. This inverse, or downward, approach was applied to daily streamflow data of rivers in different climate zones (Germany, Western Australia, Turkey) under different influences. The mostly shallow, unconfined aquifers were found to react as nonlinear reservoirs and an appropriate recession function was used instead of the traditional exponential function of the linear reservoir. However, though the actual storage-discharge relationships of aquifers will hardly change, flow recession properties are subject to seasonal variation and changes due to evapotranspiration and other fluxes and abstractions from the groundwater. As demonstrated in the case studies, recession analysis and baseflow separation permits the detection and quantification of these changes. In a separate application, the method is used to identify groundwater flow intruded into leaky sewer lines. Copyright {\textcopyright} 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.",
keywords = "Construction engineering and architecture, baserflow, recession, groundwater balance, baseflow separation, seasonal variation",
author = "Hartmut Wittenberg",
year = "2003",
month = aug,
day = "15",
doi = "10.1002/hyp.1324",
language = "English",
volume = "17",
pages = "2113--2123",
journal = "Hydrological Processes",
issn = "0885-6087",
publisher = "John Wiley & Sons Ltd.",
number = "11",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Effects of season and man-made changes on baseflow and flow recession

T2 - case studies

AU - Wittenberg, Hartmut

PY - 2003/8/15

Y1 - 2003/8/15

N2 - Discharge hydrographs of rivers carry the cumulated information on the various hydrological processes in catchments and the influences imposed on them. From the analysis of observed baseflow recessions, direct and groundwater flow can be separated and time series of the main components of the underlying groundwater balance, namely discharge, evapotranspiration losses, abstractions, storage and recharge, can be derived. This inverse, or downward, approach was applied to daily streamflow data of rivers in different climate zones (Germany, Western Australia, Turkey) under different influences. The mostly shallow, unconfined aquifers were found to react as nonlinear reservoirs and an appropriate recession function was used instead of the traditional exponential function of the linear reservoir. However, though the actual storage-discharge relationships of aquifers will hardly change, flow recession properties are subject to seasonal variation and changes due to evapotranspiration and other fluxes and abstractions from the groundwater. As demonstrated in the case studies, recession analysis and baseflow separation permits the detection and quantification of these changes. In a separate application, the method is used to identify groundwater flow intruded into leaky sewer lines. Copyright © 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

AB - Discharge hydrographs of rivers carry the cumulated information on the various hydrological processes in catchments and the influences imposed on them. From the analysis of observed baseflow recessions, direct and groundwater flow can be separated and time series of the main components of the underlying groundwater balance, namely discharge, evapotranspiration losses, abstractions, storage and recharge, can be derived. This inverse, or downward, approach was applied to daily streamflow data of rivers in different climate zones (Germany, Western Australia, Turkey) under different influences. The mostly shallow, unconfined aquifers were found to react as nonlinear reservoirs and an appropriate recession function was used instead of the traditional exponential function of the linear reservoir. However, though the actual storage-discharge relationships of aquifers will hardly change, flow recession properties are subject to seasonal variation and changes due to evapotranspiration and other fluxes and abstractions from the groundwater. As demonstrated in the case studies, recession analysis and baseflow separation permits the detection and quantification of these changes. In a separate application, the method is used to identify groundwater flow intruded into leaky sewer lines. Copyright © 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

KW - Construction engineering and architecture

KW - baserflow

KW - recession

KW - groundwater balance

KW - baseflow separation

KW - seasonal variation

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0041729549&partnerID=8YFLogxK

UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/50d33b02-dcc6-38cd-914d-a407b4faf45d/

U2 - 10.1002/hyp.1324

DO - 10.1002/hyp.1324

M3 - Journal articles

VL - 17

SP - 2113

EP - 2123

JO - Hydrological Processes

JF - Hydrological Processes

SN - 0885-6087

IS - 11

ER -

DOI

Zuletzt angesehen

Forschende

  1. Moritz Meyer

Publikationen

  1. Das Pumpspeicherwerk in Geesthacht
  2. Konstruktive Kritik
  3. Systemic aspects of auditory interactive art in the public sphere.
  4. Exportorientierte Tabakwirtschaft in Zimbabwe
  5. Widening the evaluative space for ecosystem services
  6. Datenmodellierung mit dem Entity-Relationship-Ansatz
  7. Verhüllt – unverhüllt
  8. Explaining renewable energy consumption among students
  9. Introducing WIR
  10. Green deserts, but not always
  11. Teaching Provenance to AI
  12. Die Operationalisierung von objektiver und subjektiver Statusinkonsistenz.
  13. AmQA
  14. Reallabore im Kontext Transformativer Forschung
  15. Connecting feedback to self-efficacy
  16. Regulatory focus and thinking about the future versus reality.
  17. Was Polybios an einer modernen Universität zu suchen hat
  18. Archival research on carbon reporting quality. A review of determinants and consequences for firm value
  19. Environmental Shareholder Value
  20. Correlation of trends in cashmere production and declines of large wild mammals
  21. Think globally, learn locally!
  22. Collective emotions in institutional creation work
  23. Adapting Growth Models for Digital Startups
  24. Learning to spend time in unusual times
  25. Contrasting changes in the abundance and diversity of North American bird assemblages from 1971 to 2010
  26. John Stuart Mill: Über die Freiheit
  27. Nichts wie weg
  28. Tortenschlacht
  29. How Individuals React Emotionally to Others’ (Mis)Fortunes
  30. Buffer Institutions in Public Higher Education in the Context of Institutional Autonomy and Governmental Control: A Comparative View of the United States and Germany
  31. Das Anfertigen von Notizen als Lernstrategie beim mathematischen Modellieren
  32. Temperature-dependent mechanical behavior of aluminum AM structures generated via multi-layer friction surfacing
  33. Bird community responses to the edge between suburbs and reserves