The social connectivity of subsurface flows: Towards a better integration of the vertical dimension in socio‐hydrosystem studies

Author:

Boyer Anne‐Lise12ORCID,Blanchon David3ORCID,Schmitt Laurent4ORCID,Badariotti Dominique4,Bedell Jean‐Philippe5ORCID,Beisel Jean‐Nicolas4ORCID,Chabaux François6,da Silva Eduardo Ferreira7ORCID,Huneau Frédéric8ORCID,Imfeld Gwenaël9ORCID,O'Neill Brian F.10ORCID,Pasqualini Vanina11ORCID,Radakovitch Olivier12ORCID,Staentzel Cybill13ORCID,Le Tourneau François‐Michel14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. CNRS EVS UMR 5600 – Labex, DRIIHM Lyon France

2. IRL iGlobes Tucson Arizona USA

3. UMR LAVUE, Department of Geography Université Paris‐Nanterre Nanterre France

4. UMR LIVE 7362 University of Strasbourg Strasbourg France

5. ENTPE, UMR 5023 LEHNA University of Lyon Lyon France

6. University of Strasbourg, CNRS, EOST, LHyGeS Strasbourg France

7. GEOBIOTEC, Department of Geosciences University of Aveiro Aveiro Portugal

8. UMR CNRS SPE 6134, Laboratoire d'Hydrogéologie University of Corsica Pascal Paoli Corte France

9. UMR ITES 7063 University of Strasbourg Strasbourg France

10. College of Global Future Arizona State University Tempe Arizona USA

11. UMR CNRS SPE 6134 University of Corsica Pascal Paoli Corte France

12. Institut de Radioprotection et de Sûreté Nucléaire, PSE/SRTE/LRTA Saint‐Paul‐Lez‐Durance France

13. UMR 7362 LIVE CNRS University of Strasbourg Strasbourg France

14. UMR 8586 PRODIG Université Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne/IRD/Agroparistech Paris France

Abstract

AbstractThis contribution points out that while the importance of hydrologic, geomorphic, ecological, temporal, and socio‐cultural connectivity in the functioning of hydrosystems has been acknowledged in three dimensions (longitudinal, lateral, and vertical), vertical connectivity has often been overlooked. Drawing on a multidisciplinary literature review, the authors aim to highlight the socio‐cultural connectivity of subsurface flows and aquifers as a crucial factor for socio‐hydrosystem understanding and management. The piece builds on emergent literature which underscores how groundwater, shallow groundwater, and the hyporheic zone are coproduced by nature and society through time. Furthermore, the review explores how verticality has become an important heuristic dimension at the intersection of the environmental and social sciences, and there has been a particular focus on the hyporheic zone to look at how notions of interstitiality and (in)visibility can be better integrated with socio‐hydrosystem science and management. Finally, the paper calls for further research to integrate the vertical dimension of hydrosystems into more comprehensive socio‐hydrological frameworks, which remain, at times, empirically and theoretically weak on questions of social power, even if they do incorporate aspects of political systems. Especially as societies' relationships to groundwater may be at the heart of climate change adaptation strategies, greater consideration of the social connectivity to subflows is a necessary direction for sustainable water resource management and scholarship.This article is categorized under: Human Water > Water Governance Science of Water > Hydrological Processes Science of Water > Water and Environmental Change

Funder

Labex DRIIHM

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Ocean Engineering,Water Science and Technology,Aquatic Science,Ecology,Oceanography

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