Publications
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Advancing process‐based watershed hydrological research using near‐surface geophysics: A vision for, and review of, electrical and magnetic geophysical methods Advancing process‐based watershed hydrological research using near‐surface geophysics: A vision for, and review of, electrical and magnetic geophysical methods
We want to develop a dialogue between geophysicists and hydrologists interested in synergistically advancing process based watershed research. We identify recent advances in geophysical instrumentation, and provide a vision for the use of electrical and magnetic geophysical instrumentation in watershed scale hydrology. The focus of the paper is to identify instrumentation that could...
Authors
D.A. Robinson, A. Binley, N. Crook, F. D. Day-Lewis, T. P. A Ferre, V. J. S. Grauch, R. Knight, M. Knoll, V. Lakshmi, R. Miller, J. Nyquist, L. Pellerin, K. Singha, L. Slater
Implications of rate-limited mass transfer for aquifer storage and recovery Implications of rate-limited mass transfer for aquifer storage and recovery
Pressure to decrease reliance on surface water storage has led to increased interest in aquifer storage and recovery (ASR) systems. Recovery efficiency, which is the ratio of the volume of recovered water that meets a predefined standard to total volume of injected fluid, is a common criterion of ASR viability. Recovery efficiency can be degraded by a number of physical and geochemical...
Authors
Sean L. Culkin, Kamini Singha, Frederick D. Day-Lewis
Qualitative Comparison of Streamflow Information Programs of the U.S. Geological Survey and Three Non-Federal Agencies Qualitative Comparison of Streamflow Information Programs of the U.S. Geological Survey and Three Non-Federal Agencies
A qualitative comparison was made of the streamgaging programs of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and three non-Federal agencies in terms of approximate costs and streamflow-information products produced. The three non-Federal agencies provided the USGS with detailed information on their streamgaging program and related costs, and the USGS explored, through publicly available Web sites...
Authors
J. Michael Norris, Michael Lewis, Michael Dorsey, Robert Kimbrough, Robert R. Holmes, Ward Staubitz
Rocks above the clouds: A hiker's and climber's guide to Colorado mountain geology Rocks above the clouds: A hiker's and climber's guide to Colorado mountain geology
A Colorado mountain geology book written specifically for climbers, scramblers and hikers. A geologic primer for mountain people with range-by-range geological descriptions of Colorado mountains and detailed geologic information on the Fourteeners. Rocks Above the Clouds is the first geology book written for climbers, scramblers and hikers. It is an exploration of how the nature of...
Authors
Jack Reed, Gene Ellis
Characterizing submarine ground‐water discharge using fiber‐optic distributed temperature sensing and marine electrical resistivity Characterizing submarine ground‐water discharge using fiber‐optic distributed temperature sensing and marine electrical resistivity
Submarine ground‐water discharge (SGD) contributes important solute fluxes to coastal waters. Pollutants are transported to coastal ecosystems by SGD at spatially and temporally variable rates. New approaches are needed to characterize the effects of storm‐event, tidal, and seasonal forcing on SGD. Here, we evaluate the utility of two geophysical methods‐fiber‐optic distributed...
Authors
Rory Henderson, Frederick D. Day-Lewis, John W. Lane, Charles F. Harvey, Lanbo Liu
Electrical characterization of non‐Fickian transport in groundwater and hyporheic systems Electrical characterization of non‐Fickian transport in groundwater and hyporheic systems
Recent work indicates that processes controlling solute mass transfer between mobile and less mobile domains in porous media may be quantified by combining electrical geophysical methods and electrically conductive tracers. Whereas direct geochemical measurements of solute preferentially sample the mobile domain, electrical geophysical methods are sensitive to changes in bulk electrical
Authors
Kamini Singha, Adam Pidlisecky, Frederick D. Day-Lewis, Michael N. Gooseff
Fiber‐optic distributed temperature sensing: A new tool for assessment and monitoring of hydrologic processes Fiber‐optic distributed temperature sensing: A new tool for assessment and monitoring of hydrologic processes
Fiber‐optic distributed temperature sensing (FO DTS) is an emerging technology for characterizing and monitoring a wide range of important earth processes. FO DTS utilizes laser light to measure temperature along the entire length of standard telecommunications optical fibers. The technology can measure temperature every meter over FO cables up to 30 kilometers (km) long. Commercially...
Authors
John W. Lane, Frederick D. Day-Lewis, Carole D. Johnson, Cian B. Dawson, David L. Nelms, Cheryl A. Eddy-Miller, Jerrod D. Wheeler, Charles F. Harvey, Hanan N. Karam
Levee evaluation using MASW: Preliminary findings from the Citrus Lakefront Levee, New Orleans, Louisiana Levee evaluation using MASW: Preliminary findings from the Citrus Lakefront Levee, New Orleans, Louisiana
The utility of the multi‐channel analysis of surface waves (MASW) seismic method for non‐invasive assessment of earthen levees was evaluated for a section of the Citrus Lakefront Levee, New Orleans, Louisiana. This test was conducted after the New Orleans' area levee system had been stressed by Hurricane Katrina in 2005. The MASW data were acquired in a seismically noisy, urban...
Authors
John W. Lane, Julian M. Ivanov, Frederick D. Day-Lewis, Drew Clemens, Robert Patev, Richard D. Miller
Estimation of bedrock depth using the horizontal‐to‐vertical (H/V) ambient‐noise seismic method Estimation of bedrock depth using the horizontal‐to‐vertical (H/V) ambient‐noise seismic method
Estimating sediment thickness and the geometry of the bedrock surface is a key component of many hydrogeologic studies. The horizontal‐to‐vertical (H/V) ambient‐noise seismic method is a novel, non‐invasive technique that can be used to rapidly estimate the depth to bedrock. The H/V method uses a single, broad‐band three‐component seismometer to record ambient seismic noise. The ratio of...
Authors
John W. Lane, Eric A. White, Gregory V. Steele, James C. Cannia
Cross-borehole flow tests and insights into hydraulic connections in fractured mudstone and sandstone Cross-borehole flow tests and insights into hydraulic connections in fractured mudstone and sandstone
Cross-borehole flow tests provided insights into hydraulic connections in fractured and dipping mudstone and sandstone that were consistent with the lithostratigraphic and structural framework of a VOCcontaminated bedrock research site in west-central New Jersey. Two cross-borehole flow tests were completed. Each test involved measurement and analysis of transient flow in a newly...
Authors
John Williams, Pierre Lacombe, Carole D. Johnson, Frederick L. Paillet
Moment inference from tomograms Moment inference from tomograms
Time-lapse geophysical tomography can provide valuable qualitative insights into hydrologic transport phenomena associated with aquifer dynamics, tracer experiments, and engineered remediation. Increasingly, tomograms are used to infer the spatial and/or temporal moments of solute plumes; these moments provide quantitative information about transport processes (e.g., advection...
Authors
Frederick D. Day-Lewis, Yongping Chen, Kamini Singha
Marine geophysical investigation of selected sites in Bridgeport Harbor, Connecticut, 2006 Marine geophysical investigation of selected sites in Bridgeport Harbor, Connecticut, 2006
A marine geophysical investigation was conducted in 2006 to help characterize the bottom and subbottom materials and extent of bedrock in selected areas of Bridgeport Harbor, Connecticut. The data will be used by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in the design of confined aquatic disposal (CAD) cells within the harbor to facilitate dredging of the harbor. Three water-based geophysical...
Authors
Carole D. Johnson, Eric A. White