← Back to PublicationsJournal Article

Understanding the Hydrogeochemical Response of a Mountainous Watershed Using Integrated Surface-Subsurface Flow and Reactive Transport Modeling

Abstract

Abstract Climate change and other disturbances significantly impact hydrogeochemical exports from mountainous headwater catchments such as the Upper Colorado River Basin. Developing a mechanistic understanding of how the physical and chemical processes interact in time and space in an integrated manner is key to quantifying the future impacts of such disturbances. The hydrogeochemical response of a mountainous catchment in the 2010–2019 period is evaluated quantitatively using a high‐resolution model that simulates integrated hydrology, and transport and reactions for selected solutes and minerals. The model assumes that pyrite is present only at depth while calcite is distributed uniformly, and captures the observed C‐Q reasonably well. Distinct C‐Q dynamics are observed in an average (WY16), a wet (WY17), and a dry (WY18) water year. The model also quantifies the water fraction from surface, shallow and deep groundwater compartments using tracers, and suggests greater groundwater contributions to peak stream discharge in the dry WY18. Results demonstrate that calcium concentrations do not change significantly from year to year, while sulfate shows significant temporal variability. Pyrite dissolution is affected by the changing hydrological drivers where it is enhanced in the dry WY18; calcite dissolution supplements calcium dilution under high flow conditions. The model simulates the reaction hotspots controlled by hydrological conditions, and the spatially‐resolved results show that higher soil saturation and less snowpack occur earlier on the south‐facing side than on the north‐facing side. This is a first‐of‐its‐kind demonstration of a model that integrates hydrologic processes, including evapotranspiration, and reactive transport to enable a predictive understanding of hydrogeochemical exports.

Local Knowledge Graph (39 entities)

Loading graph...

References (55)

13 in Knowledge Hub, 42 external

Publication

Differential C-Q Analysis: A New Approach to Inferring Lateral Transport and Hydrologic Transients Within Multiple Reaches of a Mountainous Headwater Catchment

DOI: 10.3389/frwa.2020.00024
Publication

Factors Controlling Seasonal Groundwater and Solute Flux from Snow-Dominated Basins

DOI: 10.1002/hyp.13151
Publication

Geochemical Controls on Release and Speciation of Fe(II) and Mn(II) From Hyporheic Sediments of East River, Colorado

DOI: 10.3389/frwa.2020.562298
Publication

From legacy contamination to watershed systems science: a review of scientific insights and technologies developed through DOE-supported research in water and energy security

DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/ac59a9
Publication

Geochemical exports to river from the intra-meander hyporheic zone under transient hydrologic conditions: East River Mountainous Watershed, Colorado

DOI: 10.1029/2018wr023377
Publication

The East River, Colorado, Watershed: A mountainous community testbed for improving predictive understanding of multiscale hydrological-biogeochemical dynamics

DOI: 10.2136/vzj2018.03.0061
Publication

Contrasting the hydrologic response due to land cover and climate change in a mountain headwaters system

DOI: 10.1002/eco.1779
Publication

Challenges in Building an End-to-End System for Acquisition, Management, and Integration of Diverse Data From Sensor Networks in Watersheds: Lessons From a Mountainous Community Observatory in East River, Colorado

DOI: 10.1109/access.2019.2957793
Publication

Bedrock weathering contributes to subsurface reactive nitrogen and nitrous oxide emissions

DOI: 10.1038/s41561-021-00717-0
Dataset

Anion Data for the East River Watershed, Colorado (2014-2022)

DOI: 10.15485/1668054
Dataset

ATS (Advanced Terrestrial Simulator) integrated hydrology and reactive transport model output in Copper Creek, Colorado.

DOI: 10.15485/1877377
Publication

Distinct Source Water Chemistry Shapes Contrasting Concentration-Discharge Patterns

DOI: 10.1029/2018wr024257
Dataset

Cation Data for the East River Watershed, Colorado (2014-2021)

DOI: 10.15485/1668055