Baseflow Age Distributions and Depth of Active Groundwater Flow in a Snow Dominated Mountain Headwater Basin
Abstract
Abstract Deeper flows through bedrock in mountain watersheds could be important, but lack of data to characterize bedrock properties limits understanding. To address data scarcity, we combine a previously published integrated hydrologic model of a snow‐dominated, headwater basin of the Colorado River with a new method for dating baseflow age using dissolved gas tracers SF 6 , CFC‐113, N 2 , and Ar. The original flow model predicts the majority of groundwater flow through shallow alluvium (<8 m) sitting on top of less permeable bedrock. The water moves too quickly and is unable to reproduce observed SF 6 concentrations. To match gas data, bedrock permeability is increased to allow a larger fraction of deeper and older groundwater flow (median 112 m). The updated hydrologic model indicates interannual variability in baseflow age (3–12 years) is controlled by the volume of seasonal interflow and tightly coupled to snow accumulation and monsoon rain. Deeper groundwater flow remains stable (11.7 ± 0.7 years) as a function mean historical recharge to bedrock hydraulic conductivity (R/K). A sensitivity analysis suggests that increasing bedrock K effectively moves this alpine basin away from its original conceptualization of hyperlocalized groundwater flow (high R/K) with groundwater age insensitive to changes in water inputs. Instead, this basin is situated close to the precipitation threshold defining recharge controlled groundwater flow conditions (low R/K) in which groundwater age increases with small reductions in precipitation. Work stresses the need to explore alternative methods characterizing bedrock properties in mountain basins to better quantify deeper groundwater flow and predict their hydrologic response to change.
Local Knowledge Graph (36 entities)
Related Works
Items connected by shared entities, co-authorship, citations, or semantic similarity.
Direct Observation of the Depth of Active Groundwater Circulation in an Alpine Watershed
Constraining Bedrock Groundwater Residence Times in a Mountain System With Environmental Tracer Observations and Bayesian Uncertainty Quantification
Streamflow partitioning and transit time distribution in snow-dominated basins as a function of climate
Constraining Bedrock Groundwater Residence Times in a Mountain System with Environmental Tracer Observations and Bayesian Uncertainty Quantification: Modeling and Data Package
Copper Creek Baseflow Age Experiment using Environmental Gas Tracers in the East River Watershed, CO.
Groundwater and Surface Water Flow (GSFLOW) model files to explore bedrock circulation depth and porosity in Copper Creek, Colorado
Gunnison River Basin Facts
From Mesas and Mountains to Rocks and Rivers: A Quick Overview of the Geologic History of the Gunnison Basin
Gunnison Basin Power
Cited By (37 times, 8 in Knowledge Hub)
The role of bedrock circulation depth and porosity in mountain streamflow response to prolonged drought
Matrix diffusion controls mountain hillslope groundwater ages and inferred storage dynamics
Declining groundwater storage expected to amplify mountain streamflow reductions in a warmer world
Stream water sourcing from high-elevation snowpack inferred from stable isotopes of water: a novel application of d-excess values
Old-Aged groundwater contributes to mountain hillslope hydrologic dynamics
Constraining Bedrock Groundwater Residence Times in a Mountain System With Environmental Tracer Observations and Bayesian Uncertainty Quantification
Surface parameters and bedrock properties covary across a mountainous watershed: Insights from machine learning and geophysics
Baseflow Age Distributions and Depth of Active Groundwater Flow in a Snow Dominated Mountain Headwater Basin
References (132)
7 in Knowledge Hub, 125 external
