大気水圏科学(A)
セッション小記号 水文・陸水・地下水学・水環境(HW)
セッションID A-HW28
タイトル 和文 Tracer Hydrology: Advances in Measurement and Modelling
英文 Tracer Hydrology: Advances in Measurement and Modelling
タイトル短縮名 和文 Tracer Hydrology
英文 Tracer Hydrology
代表コンビーナ 氏名 和文 Oliver S. Schilling
英文 Oliver S. Schilling
所属 和文 Hydrogeology, Department of Environmental Sciences, University of Basel, Switzerland
英文 Hydrogeology, Department of Environmental Sciences, University of Basel, Switzerland
共同コンビーナ 1 氏名 和文 Tomonaga Yama
英文 Yama Tomonaga
所属 和文 University of Basel
英文 University of Basel
共同コンビーナ 2 氏名 和文 辻村 真貴
英文 Maki Tsujimura
所属 和文 筑波大学生命環境系
英文 Institute of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Tsukuba
共同コンビーナ 3 氏名 和文 Jared David van Rooyen
英文 Jared David van Rooyen
所属 和文 Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology
英文 Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology
発表言語 E
スコープ 和文
Hydrological tracers rank among the most important tools in hydrology and hydrogeology. They improve our conceptual understanding of hydrological systems and support quantitative insights into water budgets, flow paths, groundwater recharge, groundwater-surface water interactions, hydrochemistry, geochemistry, ecohydrology and geomicrobiology. Recent advances in analytical techniques (e.g., high- frequency analyses of dissolved (noble)gases, stable water isotopes or microbial community compositions directly in the field, ultra low-level counting of rare noble gas radionuclides, or high-throughput sequencing of environmental DNA) now allow precise measurement of an unprecedented range of hydrologically important physical, chemical, and biological processes at spatial and temporal resolutions unthinkable just a few years ago. Moreover, owing to the recent surge in computational power and integrated models, we are finally enable to explicitly simulate the (reactive) transport of hydrological tracers throughout the entire hydrosphere. This session aims to showcase recent advances, innovations, and emerging methods in measuring, simulating, and interpreting hydrological tracers. In particular, it seeks to highlight multidisciplinary approaches that provide an improved conceptual and/or quantitative understanding of complex hydrological, hydrogeological and ecohydrological systems. Because acquisition of hydrological tracers also supports the decision-making process, the goal of this session also lies in demonstrating studies which helped improving water resources management and making the exploitation of our precious water resources more sustainable and adaptable to future anthropogenic and climatic perturbations.
英文
Hydrological tracers rank among the most important tools in hydrology and hydrogeology. They improve our conceptual understanding of hydrological systems and support quantitative insights into water budgets, flow paths, groundwater recharge, groundwater-surface water interactions, hydrochemistry, geochemistry, ecohydrology and geomicrobiology. Recent advances in analytical techniques (e.g., high- frequency analyses of dissolved (noble)gases, stable water isotopes or microbial community compositions directly in the field, ultra low-level counting of rare noble gas radionuclides, or high-throughput sequencing of environmental DNA) now allow precise measurement of an unprecedented range of hydrologically important physical, chemical, and biological processes at spatial and temporal resolutions unthinkable just a few years ago. Moreover, owing to the recent surge in computational power and integrated models, we are finally enable to explicitly simulate the (reactive) transport of hydrological tracers throughout the entire hydrosphere. This session aims to showcase recent advances, innovations, and emerging methods in measuring, simulating, and interpreting hydrological tracers. In particular, it seeks to highlight multidisciplinary approaches that provide an improved conceptual and/or quantitative understanding of complex hydrological, hydrogeological and ecohydrological systems. Because acquisition of hydrological tracers also supports the decision-making process, the goal of this session also lies in demonstrating studies which helped improving water resources management and making the exploitation of our precious water resources more sustainable and adaptable to future anthropogenic and climatic perturbations.
発表方法 口頭および(または)ポスターセッション
時間 講演番号 タイトル 発表者
口頭発表 5月27日 PM1
13:50 - 14:10 AHW28-01 Helium isotope anomaly of groundwater related to large earthquake in Japan 佐野 有司
14:10 - 14:25 AHW28-02 多変量統計解析による富士山周辺地下水・温泉水の起源とテクトニクス制御の解明 西澤 達治
14:25 - 14:40 AHW28-03 Long-term dissolved gas composition and isotope monitoring in Fujinomiya, Japan 金 東煥
14:40 - 14:55 AHW28-04 A portable Gas Equilibrium Membrane Sampling System (GEMSS) Tomonaga Yama
14:55 - 15:10 AHW28-05 From Dissolution to Detection: Krypton as a Tracer in Hydraulic Injection Experiments Alexandra Kathryn Lightfoot
口頭発表 5月27日 PM2
15:35 - 15:55 AHW28-06 Modeling of tritium in precipitation and water vapor with an atmospheric general circulation model and its use as a hydrological tracer Alexandre CAUQUOIN
15:55 - 16:10 AHW28-07 From atmospheric to terrestrial tritium-tracer simulation in Japan water cycle Maksym A Gusyev
16:10 - 16:25 AHW28-08 Tracer-Constrained Recharge Elevation and Geogenic Controls on Groundwater Quality in Mountain Systems — Evidence from the Swiss High Alps Angela Ruth Welham
16:25 - 16:40 AHW28-09 StorAge Selection Theory for Tracer Hydrology: Linking Storage, Transport, and Hydrologic Dynamics Ciaran J Harman
16:40 - 16:55 AHW28-10 Dynamics of Dissolved Organic Matter with Groundwater-Surface Water Cycle in Humid Tropical Urban Watershed 鈴木 泰我
講演番号 タイトル 発表者
ポスター発表 5月27日 PM3
AHW28-P01 Microbial fingerprints as tracers for groundwater and microbial origins in Alpine and volcanic mountain systems Oliver S. Schilling
AHW28-P02 富士山地下水における熱水流体のトレーサーとしての放射性炭素の可能性 山本 真也
AHW28-P03 Initial Multi-Tracer Hydrogeochemical Baseline of Deep Groundwater from a Crystalline-Rock Borehole at a Candidate URL Site in the Taebaek, South Korea Jaehoon Choi
AHW28-P04 A Novel Framework for End-Member Selection in EMMA (End-Member Mixing Analysis): Integrating Internal End-Members Through Variable-Specific Extrema SEOIN CHOI
AHW28-P05 Remote Indo-South Pacific as the primary upstream control on East Asian precipitation isotopes Yuan Gao