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Water residence time and runoff generation in the western Cascades of Oregon

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

Field Value
Title Water residence time and runoff generation in the western Cascades of Oregon
Names McGuire, Kevin J. (creator)
McDonnell, Jeffrey J. (advisor)
Date Issued 2004-09-24 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 2005
Abstract The age, or residence time of water is a fundamental descriptor of catchment hydrology,
revealing information about the storage, flow pathways and source of water in a single
integrated measure. While there has been tremendous recent interest in residence time to
characterize catchments, there are few studies that quantify residence time at the
catchment scale or explore the process controls on the distribution of residence times.
The objective of this study is to determine the controls on catchment-scale residence time
using hydrometric, tracer, and modeling approaches at hillslope to multiple catchment
scales. Topographic controls on residence time are examined for seven catchments at the
14. J. Andrews Experimental Forest that range in basin area from 0.085 to 62.4 km2
representing diverse geologic and geomorphic conditions. Residence times arc estimated
using stable isotope tracers and convolution integral models. Baseflow mean residence
time results range from 0.8 to 3.3 years. There is no correlation between residence time
and basin area; however, mean residence time is correlated to the catchment-scale median
flowpath distance and flowpath gradient to the stream network, suggesting that
topography is a first-order control on catchment-scale transport. The examination of
detailed hydrological processes at the hillslope scale through a wet-up period, provide the
basis for a dynamic conceptual model of runoff generation and residence time, which are
controlled by moisture thresholds and expanding subsurface saturated areas. The
residence time of runoff during storms is a dynamic amalgamation of various
components, each with their own characteristic shape, mixing behavior, and timescale,
which range from 6 to 27 hours for event water and 10 to 30 days for soil water. A
coupled hydrologic-tracer model at the hillslope scale indicates that the combination of
storm event and between-event processes is necessary for the representation of realistic
residence time distributions at hillslope and catchment scales. This study demonstrates
that water residence time provides insight to hydrological processes from hillslope to
large catchment scales.
Genre Thesis
Topic Watersheds -- Oregon -- H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/9719

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