Abstract
Abstract. Transit time distributions (TTDs) integrate information
on timing, amount, storage, mixing and flow paths of water and thus
characterize hydrologic and hydrochemical catchment response unlike any
other descriptor. Here, we simulate the shape of TTDs in an idealized
low-order catchment and investigate whether it changes systematically with
certain catchment and climate properties. To this end, we used a physically
based, spatially explicit 3-D model, injected tracer with a precipitation
event and recorded the resulting forward TTDs at the outlet of a small
(∼6000 m2) catchment for different scenarios. We found
that the TTDs can be subdivided into four parts: (1) early part – controlled
by soil hydraulic conductivity and antecedent soil moisture content, (2) middle part – a transition zone with no clear pattern or control, (3) later
part – influenced by soil hydraulic conductivity and subsequent
precipitation amount, and (4) very late tail of the breakthrough curve –
governed by bedrock hydraulic conductivity. The modeled TTD shapes can be
predicted using a dimensionless number: higher initial peaks are observed if
the inflow of water to a catchment is not equal to its capacity to discharge
water via subsurface flow paths, and lower initial peaks are connected to
increasing available storage. In most cases the modeled TTDs were humped
with nonzero initial values and varying weights of the tails. Therefore,
none of the best-fit theoretical probability functions could describe the
entire TTD shape exactly. Still, we found that generally gamma and
log-normal distributions work better for scenarios of low and high soil
hydraulic conductivity, respectively.
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Engineering,General Environmental Science
Cited by
13 articles.
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