Complex baseflow in urban streams: an example from central Ohio, USA |
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Authors: | G Liu F W Schwartz Y Kim |
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Institution: | 1. School of Earth Sciences, The Ohio State University, Columbus, 43210, OH, USA 2. International Cooperation Office, Korea Institute of Geoscience and Mineral Resources (KIGAM), Daejeon, 305-350, Korea
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Abstract: | Baseflow in urban streams remains an under-researched topic, given the critical roles it plays and the extensive and ever-increasing pace of urbanization and its impacts on stream ecosystems. This study is designed to characterize the complexity of baseflow in Dry Run, an urban stream in Columbus, Ohio. A hierarchical modeling approach combined with observations of streamflow discharge (Q) and specific conductance (SC) of the stream water was applied. The streamflow measurements showed that baseflow in Dry Run is small (below 1 m3 s?1) and being impacted by anthropogenic activities that directly discharge water into the stream. Model analyses using IHACRES and SWMM showed that baseflow is mainly composed of two different components—groundwater inflow and slowly released flows from storm-water detention ponds. The complex origins of baseflow are exemplified by hysteresis, which can be described with a plot of SC versus discharge. Overall, the study shows the value of geochemical measurements that constrain conceptual models of source-water inflows to the stream. |
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