4.7 Article

Time-series temperature analyses indicate conduction and diffusion are dominant heat-transfer processes in fine sediment, low-flow streams

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 768, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.144367

Keywords

Oso Creek Texas; Time-series temperature; Stream-groundwater exchange; Fine-sediment streambed

Funding

  1. Center for Water Supplies Studies (CWSS) at Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi [0541]
  2. Coastal Bend Bays Estuaries Program (CBBEP) [0541]

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The study utilized thermal methods, Darcy's law, and electrical resistivity evaluations to improve understanding of flow and transport processes in low permeability, low-flow coastal streams. The seasonal-trend decomposition using Loess (STL) method was tested and validated as a means to differentiate between advection and conduction. Results showed that conduction and diffusion are dominant processes of heat and solute transfer in fine-sediment streambeds, providing insights into groundwater-stream interaction and water resources in semiarid coastal areas.
Stream-groundwater exchange has been investigated in a wide range of hydrologic settings, though very few studies have focused on line-sediment streambeds. Well-established thermal methods (i.e., analytical and numerical solution of time-series temperature depth-profiles) in combination with Darcy's and electrical resistivity (ER) evaluations were implemented to improve understanding of processes dominating flow and transport in a low permeability and low-flow coastal stream such as Oso Creek, Texas. The seasonal-trend decomposition using Loess (STL) is tested as a potential means to differentiate between advection and conduction and is validated against groundwater fluxes derived from the other well-established thermal methods. The numerical and analytical solutions indicate groundwater upward discharge was 9 mm d(-1) for summer and 3.5 mm d(-1) for winter, corresponding to the region's extreme drought conditions. These types of low flow conditions are usually accompanied by hyporheic flow, limiting the vertical flow assumption. While the numerical and analytical methods provide good insight into streambed hydrology for a low-permeability and low-flow stream in a semiarid coastal area, there are limitations associated with the STL method. The analytical and numerical thermal methods employed herein confirm that conduction and diffusion are the dominant processes of heat and solute transfer in fine-sediment streambeds, providing an improved understanding of process-based groundwater-stream interaction and water resources in this type of settings. (C) 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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