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    Effect of Unsteady Surface Water Hydraulics on Mixing-Dependent Hyporheic Denitrification in Riverbed Dunes

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    Date
    2018-08-23
    Author
    Eastes, Lauren Ann
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    Abstract
    Increased reactive nitrogen from human activities negatively affects surface water (SW) quality. The hyporheic zone, where SW and groundwater interact, possesses unique biogeochemical conditions that can attenuate contaminants (e.g., denitrification), including mixing-dependent reactions that require components from both water sources. Previous research has explored mixing-dependent denitrification in the hyporheic zone but did not address the effects of varying SW depth as would occur from storms, tides, dam operation, and varying seasons. We simulated steady and unsteady hyporheic flow and transport through a riverbed dune using MODFLOW and SEAM3D, and varied SW depth, degree of sediment heterogeneity, amplitude and frequency of sinusoidal fluctuations, among others to determine these effects. We found that increasing steady state surface water depth from 0.1 to 1.0 m increased non-mixing dependent aerobic respiration by 270% and mixing-dependent denitrification by 78% in homogeneous sediment. Heterogeneous hydraulic conductivity fields yielded similar results, with increases in consumption due to variation in correlation length and variance of less than 5%. Daily SW fluctuation, including variation of amplitude, period, and sinusoidal versus instantaneous changes had significantly less impact than longer-term trends in SW depth. There is potential for the hyporheic zone to attenuate NO3- in upwelling groundwater plumes. Restoration efforts may be able to maximize the potential for mixing-dependent reactions in the hyporheic zone by increasing residence times.
    General Audience Abstract
    Increased nitrogen in runoff from human activities negatively affects surface water quality. The hyporheic zone is where surface water and groundwater interact, and the mixing between the waters can help to this nitrogen to undergo reaction (denitrification), potentially stopping the contaminant from spreading. Previous research has explored this idea, but has not addressed the impact of varying surface water depth, as would realistically occur due to storms, tides, dam operation, and varying seasons. We simulated both constant and fluctuating surface water conditions on a riverbed dune to see the effects on hyporheic flow and denitrification. Test variables included the surface water depth, the degree of sediment heterogeneity, the amplitude and frequency of surface water fluctuations. We found that increasing the steady-state surface water depth had the most dramatic increase on the amount of reaction undergone. This trend was also seen in heterogeneous sediment. Any daily-scale surface water fluctuations, including runs that varied the amplitude, period, and sinusoidal vs instantaneous changes in surface water depth, had significantly less impact than longer-term trends in surface water depth.
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    http://hdl.handle.net/10919/84906
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    • Masters Theses [20942]

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