Implications of variations in stream specific conductivity for estimating baseflow using chemical mass balance and calibrated hydrograph techniques
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Published:2022-01-14
Issue:1
Volume:26
Page:183-195
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ISSN:1607-7938
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Container-title:Hydrology and Earth System Sciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci.
Abstract
Abstract. Baseflow to rivers comprises regional groundwater and lower-salinity intermediate water stores such as interflow, soil water, and bank return
flows. Chemical mass balance (CMB) calculations based on the specific
conductivity (SC) of rivers potentially estimate the groundwater contribution to baseflow. This study discusses the application of the CMB
approach in rivers from south-eastern Australia and assesses the feasibility of calibrating recursive digital filters (RDFs) and sliding minima (SM)
techniques based on streamflow data to estimate groundwater inflows. The
common strategy of assigning the SC of groundwater inflows based on the
highest annual river SC may not always be valid due to the persistent
presence of lower-salinity intermediate waters. Rather, using the river SC from low-flow periods during drought years may be more realistic. If that is
the case, the estimated groundwater inflows may be lower than expected,
which has implications for assessing contaminant transport and the impacts
of near-river groundwater extraction. Probably due to long-term variations
in the proportion of groundwater in baseflow, the RDF and SM techniques
cannot generally be calibrated using the CMB results to estimate annual
baseflow proportions. Thus, it is not possible to extend the estimates of
groundwater inflows using those methods, although in some catchments
reasonable estimates of groundwater inflows can be made from annual
streamflows. Short-term variations in the composition of baseflow also lead to baseflow estimates made using the CMB method being far more irregular than expected. This study illustrates that estimating baseflow, especially
groundwater inflows, is not straightforward.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Engineering,General Environmental Science
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