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Groundwater flow --- Water temperature --- Heat as a groundwater tracer
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This book presents the mechanism of in-situ radon volatilization and outlines the geological requisites to site a radon monitoring well for earthquake warning. A small fractured aquifer under undrained conditions is an effective natural strain meter for earthquake prediction. It shows significant merit on a local basis, and most importantly, the analysis can also be applied globally in subduction zones with similar tectonic settings and physical–chemical relationships. Between 2003 and 2010, anomalous declines in groundwater radon concentration were recurrently recorded at Antung, Taiwan, which are considered as precursory to local major earthquakes. The correlations between radon decline and earthquake magnitude are useful for early warning of local main earthquakes. The book consists of 7 chapters. Chapter 1 presents background information and the objectives of the book. Chapter 2 illustrates the methods of monitoring groundwater radon and a brief review of earthquake prediction research using groundwater radon. Chapter 3 provides the details of anomalous decrease in groundwater radon before the Taiwan Mw 6.8 Chengkung Earthquake of 2003. Chapter 4 provides the description of the mechanism of groundwater-radon volatilization. Chapter 5 shows the recurrent anomalous declines in groundwater radon concentration consistently recorded at Antung, Taiwan, prior to local main earthquakes that occurred between 2003 and 2010. Monitoring groundwater radon in small, unconfined fractured aquifers is explained in Chapter 6, followed by an analysis of correlating precursory declines in groundwater radon, precursory time with earthquake magnitudes for small, confined fractured aquifers in Chapter 7.
Geochemistry. --- Geophysics. --- Geology. --- Natural disasters. --- Natural Hazards. --- Earthquake prediction --- Radon as a groundwater tracer
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Groundwater flow --- Groundwater --- Heat as a groundwater tracer --- Dating. --- National Water-Quality Assessment Program (U.S.)
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Groundwater flow --- Groundwater --- Heat as a groundwater tracer --- Dating. --- National Water-Quality Assessment Program (U.S.)
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Comprehensive understanding of surface water and groundwater interaction is essential for effective water resources management. Groundwater and surface water are closely connected components that constantly interact with each other within the Earth’s hydrologic cycle. Many studies utilized observations to explain the surface water and groundwater interactions by carefully analyzing the behavior of surface water features (streams, lakes, reservoirs, wetlands, and estuaries) and the related aquifer environments. However, unlike visible surface water, groundwater, an invisible water resource, is not easy to measure or quantify directly. Nevertheless, demand for groundwater that is highly resilient to climate change is growing rapidly. Furthermore, groundwater is the prime source for drinking water supply and irrigation, and hence critical to global food security. Groundwater needs to be managed wisely, protected, and especially sustainably used. However, this task has become a challenge to many hydrologic systems in arid to even humid regions because of added stress caused by changing environment, climate, land use, population growth, etc. In this issue, the editors present contributions on various research areas such as the integrated surface water and groundwater analysis, sustainable management of groundwater, and the interaction between surface water and groundwater. Methodologies, strategies, case studies as well as quantitative techniques for dealing with combined surface water and groundwater management are of interest for this issue.
Research & information: general --- Environmental economics --- groundwater-surface water interaction --- analytical --- numerical --- FEMME --- STRIVE --- MODFLOW --- Long Short-Term Memory --- groundwater level prediction --- groundwater withdrawal impact --- groundwater level variation --- machine learning --- integrated surface water and groundwater analysis --- climate change --- hydraulic fracturing --- construction of well pads --- MIKE-SHE --- MIKE-11 --- northwestern Alberta --- SWAT+ --- groundwater --- modeling --- groundwater-surface water interactions --- rainwater harvesting --- climate variability --- small island developing states --- improved water governance --- national sustainable development plans --- SDG6 --- community participation --- drinking water supply --- water supply scheme --- surface water/groundwater interactions --- managed aquifer recharge --- induced riverbank filtration --- groundwater resource management --- water curtain cultivation --- surface-groundwater interaction --- water budget analysis --- Nera River --- carbonate aquifer --- recession curves --- seismic sequence --- permafrost hydrology --- Russian Arctic --- water tracks --- hydrological connectivity --- stable water isotopes --- dissolved organic carbon --- electrical resistivity tomography --- taliks --- flood --- surface and groundwater interactions --- HEIFLOW --- Managed Aquifer Recharge --- groundwater tracer --- heat transport --- surface-ground-water interactions --- infiltration basin --- groundwater hydrology --- young water fraction --- global meteoric water line --- northern Italian Apennines --- stakeholder participation --- surface water-groundwater interaction --- scenario modelling --- integrated water management --- agent-based modelling --- SimCopiapo --- water balance --- water table fluctuation method --- irrigated pastures --- deep percolation --- aquifer recharge --- clay soils --- flood irrigation --- water management --- surface water --- groundwater-surface water interaction --- analytical --- numerical --- FEMME --- STRIVE --- MODFLOW --- Long Short-Term Memory --- groundwater level prediction --- groundwater withdrawal impact --- groundwater level variation --- machine learning --- integrated surface water and groundwater analysis --- climate change --- hydraulic fracturing --- construction of well pads --- MIKE-SHE --- MIKE-11 --- northwestern Alberta --- SWAT+ --- groundwater --- modeling --- groundwater-surface water interactions --- rainwater harvesting --- climate variability --- small island developing states --- improved water governance --- national sustainable development plans --- SDG6 --- community participation --- drinking water supply --- water supply scheme --- surface water/groundwater interactions --- managed aquifer recharge --- induced riverbank filtration --- groundwater resource management --- water curtain cultivation --- surface-groundwater interaction --- water budget analysis --- Nera River --- carbonate aquifer --- recession curves --- seismic sequence --- permafrost hydrology --- Russian Arctic --- water tracks --- hydrological connectivity --- stable water isotopes --- dissolved organic carbon --- electrical resistivity tomography --- taliks --- flood --- surface and groundwater interactions --- HEIFLOW --- Managed Aquifer Recharge --- groundwater tracer --- heat transport --- surface-ground-water interactions --- infiltration basin --- groundwater hydrology --- young water fraction --- global meteoric water line --- northern Italian Apennines --- stakeholder participation --- surface water-groundwater interaction --- scenario modelling --- integrated water management --- agent-based modelling --- SimCopiapo --- water balance --- water table fluctuation method --- irrigated pastures --- deep percolation --- aquifer recharge --- clay soils --- flood irrigation --- water management --- surface water
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Comprehensive understanding of surface water and groundwater interaction is essential for effective water resources management. Groundwater and surface water are closely connected components that constantly interact with each other within the Earth’s hydrologic cycle. Many studies utilized observations to explain the surface water and groundwater interactions by carefully analyzing the behavior of surface water features (streams, lakes, reservoirs, wetlands, and estuaries) and the related aquifer environments. However, unlike visible surface water, groundwater, an invisible water resource, is not easy to measure or quantify directly. Nevertheless, demand for groundwater that is highly resilient to climate change is growing rapidly. Furthermore, groundwater is the prime source for drinking water supply and irrigation, and hence critical to global food security. Groundwater needs to be managed wisely, protected, and especially sustainably used. However, this task has become a challenge to many hydrologic systems in arid to even humid regions because of added stress caused by changing environment, climate, land use, population growth, etc. In this issue, the editors present contributions on various research areas such as the integrated surface water and groundwater analysis, sustainable management of groundwater, and the interaction between surface water and groundwater. Methodologies, strategies, case studies as well as quantitative techniques for dealing with combined surface water and groundwater management are of interest for this issue.
Research & information: general --- Environmental economics --- groundwater-surface water interaction --- analytical --- numerical --- FEMME --- STRIVE --- MODFLOW --- Long Short-Term Memory --- groundwater level prediction --- groundwater withdrawal impact --- groundwater level variation --- machine learning --- integrated surface water and groundwater analysis --- climate change --- hydraulic fracturing --- construction of well pads --- MIKE-SHE --- MIKE-11 --- northwestern Alberta --- SWAT+ --- groundwater --- modeling --- groundwater–surface water interactions --- rainwater harvesting --- climate variability --- small island developing states --- improved water governance --- national sustainable development plans --- SDG6 --- community participation --- drinking water supply --- water supply scheme --- surface water/groundwater interactions --- managed aquifer recharge --- induced riverbank filtration --- groundwater resource management --- water curtain cultivation --- surface–groundwater interaction --- water budget analysis --- Nera River --- carbonate aquifer --- recession curves --- seismic sequence --- permafrost hydrology --- Russian Arctic --- water tracks --- hydrological connectivity --- stable water isotopes --- dissolved organic carbon --- electrical resistivity tomography --- taliks --- flood --- surface and groundwater interactions --- HEIFLOW --- Managed Aquifer Recharge --- groundwater tracer --- heat transport --- surface–ground-water interactions --- infiltration basin --- groundwater hydrology --- young water fraction --- global meteoric water line --- northern Italian Apennines --- stakeholder participation --- surface water-groundwater interaction --- scenario modelling --- integrated water management --- agent-based modelling --- SimCopiapo --- water balance --- water table fluctuation method --- irrigated pastures --- deep percolation --- aquifer recharge --- clay soils --- flood irrigation --- water management --- surface water --- n/a --- groundwater-surface water interactions --- surface-groundwater interaction --- surface-ground-water interactions
Choose an application
Comprehensive understanding of surface water and groundwater interaction is essential for effective water resources management. Groundwater and surface water are closely connected components that constantly interact with each other within the Earth’s hydrologic cycle. Many studies utilized observations to explain the surface water and groundwater interactions by carefully analyzing the behavior of surface water features (streams, lakes, reservoirs, wetlands, and estuaries) and the related aquifer environments. However, unlike visible surface water, groundwater, an invisible water resource, is not easy to measure or quantify directly. Nevertheless, demand for groundwater that is highly resilient to climate change is growing rapidly. Furthermore, groundwater is the prime source for drinking water supply and irrigation, and hence critical to global food security. Groundwater needs to be managed wisely, protected, and especially sustainably used. However, this task has become a challenge to many hydrologic systems in arid to even humid regions because of added stress caused by changing environment, climate, land use, population growth, etc. In this issue, the editors present contributions on various research areas such as the integrated surface water and groundwater analysis, sustainable management of groundwater, and the interaction between surface water and groundwater. Methodologies, strategies, case studies as well as quantitative techniques for dealing with combined surface water and groundwater management are of interest for this issue.
groundwater-surface water interaction --- analytical --- numerical --- FEMME --- STRIVE --- MODFLOW --- Long Short-Term Memory --- groundwater level prediction --- groundwater withdrawal impact --- groundwater level variation --- machine learning --- integrated surface water and groundwater analysis --- climate change --- hydraulic fracturing --- construction of well pads --- MIKE-SHE --- MIKE-11 --- northwestern Alberta --- SWAT+ --- groundwater --- modeling --- groundwater–surface water interactions --- rainwater harvesting --- climate variability --- small island developing states --- improved water governance --- national sustainable development plans --- SDG6 --- community participation --- drinking water supply --- water supply scheme --- surface water/groundwater interactions --- managed aquifer recharge --- induced riverbank filtration --- groundwater resource management --- water curtain cultivation --- surface–groundwater interaction --- water budget analysis --- Nera River --- carbonate aquifer --- recession curves --- seismic sequence --- permafrost hydrology --- Russian Arctic --- water tracks --- hydrological connectivity --- stable water isotopes --- dissolved organic carbon --- electrical resistivity tomography --- taliks --- flood --- surface and groundwater interactions --- HEIFLOW --- Managed Aquifer Recharge --- groundwater tracer --- heat transport --- surface–ground-water interactions --- infiltration basin --- groundwater hydrology --- young water fraction --- global meteoric water line --- northern Italian Apennines --- stakeholder participation --- surface water-groundwater interaction --- scenario modelling --- integrated water management --- agent-based modelling --- SimCopiapo --- water balance --- water table fluctuation method --- irrigated pastures --- deep percolation --- aquifer recharge --- clay soils --- flood irrigation --- water management --- surface water --- n/a --- groundwater-surface water interactions --- surface-groundwater interaction --- surface-ground-water interactions
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