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E‐tracers: Development of a low cost wireless technique for exploring sub‐surface hydrological systems
Authors:Elizabeth A Bagshaw  Stephen Burrow  Jemma L Wadham  James Bowden  Ben Lishman  Mike Salter  Richard Barnes  Peter Nienow
Institution:1. Queens School of Engineering, University of Bristol, , Bristol, UK;2. Bristol Glaciology Centre, School of Geographical Sciences, University of Bristol, , Bristol, UK;3. School of Geosciences, University of Edinburgh, , Edinburgh, UK
Abstract:This briefing describes the first deployment of a new electronic tracer (E‐tracer) for obtaining along‐flowpath measurements in subsurface hydrological systems. These low‐cost, wireless sensor platforms were deployed into moulins on the Greenland Ice Sheet. After descending into the moulin, the tracers travelled through the subglacial drainage system before emerging at the glacier portal. They are capable of collecting along‐flowpath data from the point of injection until detection. The E‐tracers emit a radio frequency signal, which enables sensor identification, location and recovery from the proglacial plain. The second generation of prototype E‐tracers recorded water pressure, but the robust sensor design provides a versatile platform for measuring a range of parameters, including temperature and electrical conductivity, in hydrological environments that are challenging to monitor using tethered sensors. Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Keywords:wireless sensors  subglacial water pressure  tracing
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