4.7 Article

Hyporheic zone hydrologic science: A historical account of its emergence and a prospectus

Journal

WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH
Volume 51, Issue 5, Pages 3601-3616

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2015WR017028

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [EAR-0836540, EAR-0955750, EAR-1344547]
  2. Geology Foundation at the University of Texas at Austin
  3. Division Of Earth Sciences
  4. Directorate For Geosciences [0955750] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The hyporheic zone, defined by shallow subsurface pathways through river beds and banks beginning and ending at the river, is an integral and unique component of fluvial systems. It hosts myriad hydrologically controlled processes that are potentially coupled in complex ways. Understanding these processes and the connections between them is critical since these processes are not only important locally but integrate to impact increasingly larger scale biogeochemical functioning of the river corridor up to the river network scale. Thus, the hyporheic zone continues to be a growing research focus for many hydrologists for more than half the history of Water Resources Research. This manuscript partly summarizes the historical development of hyporheic zone hydrologic science as gleaned from papers published in Water Resources Research, from the birth of the concept of the hyporheic zone as a hydrologic black box ( sometimes referred to as transient storage zone), to its adolescent years of being torn between occasionally competing research perspectives of interrogating the hyporheic zone from a surface or subsurface view, to its mature emergence as an interdisciplinary research field that employs the wide array of state-of-the-art tools available to the modern hydrologist. The field is vibrant and moving in the right direction of addressing critical fundamental and applied questions with no clear end in sight in its growth. There are exciting opportunities for scientists that are able to tightly link the allied fields of geology, geomorphology, hydrology, geochemistry, and ecology to tackle the many open problems in hyporheic zone science.

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