Relations between climate variability and groundwater fluctuations in U.S. principal aquifers

The response of groundwater to interannual to multidecadal climate oscillations has important implications for water-resource sustainability, however, there is a poor understanding of how physical processes in the vadose zone dampen and filter climate variability signals prior to recharging the wate...

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Main Author: Velasco, Elzie Monique Lapus
Other Authors: Earth & Climate Sciences
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: San Francisco State University 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10211.3/142403
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spelling ftcalifstateuniv:oai:dspace.calstate.edu:10211.3/142403 2023-05-15T15:11:25+02:00 Relations between climate variability and groundwater fluctuations in U.S. principal aquifers Velasco, Elzie Monique Lapus Earth & Climate Sciences 2015 http://hdl.handle.net/10211.3/142403 en_US eng San Francisco State University http://hdl.handle.net/10211.3/142403 Copyright by Elzie Monique Lapuz Velasco, 2015 AS36 2015 GEOL .V45 Thesis 2015 ftcalifstateuniv 2022-04-13T11:18:33Z The response of groundwater to interannual to multidecadal climate oscillations has important implications for water-resource sustainability, however, there is a poor understanding of how physical processes in the vadose zone dampen and filter climate variability signals prior to recharging the water table. This thesis addresses this knowledge gap by quantifying the teleconnections between six modes of quasi-periodic climate variations and precipitation and groundwater level fluctuations within seven sand and gravel principal aquifers (PAs) in the United States. The six modes of climate variability are the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (50-80 year cycle), Pacific Decadal Oscillation (15-30 year cycle ), El Nino-Southern Oscillation (2-7 year cycle), North Atlantic Oscillation (3-6 year cycle), Pacific/North American Oscillation (<1-4 year cycle), and Arctic Oscillation (6-12 month cycle). Singular Spectrum Analysis was used to quantify climate variability signals in climatic and hydrologic time series, and the influence of soil texture, vadose zone thickness, mean infiltration flux, and infiltration period on the damping of sinusoidal signals in the vadose zone was explored using an analytical model. Results indicate that each PA reflects some influence from each of the six modes of climate variability and that the effects of these climate variations on groundwater fluctuations can be characterized spatially based on the degree of damping. There is a consistent increase (decrease) in average percent variance and lag correlation coefficients with longer (shorter) fluctuation periods. These findings highlight the importance of low frequency climate variations on hydrologic fluctuations and indicate that considering these long-term patterns will help with water resource management. Thesis Arctic North Atlantic North Atlantic oscillation California State University (CSU): DSpace Arctic Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection California State University (CSU): DSpace
op_collection_id ftcalifstateuniv
language English
description The response of groundwater to interannual to multidecadal climate oscillations has important implications for water-resource sustainability, however, there is a poor understanding of how physical processes in the vadose zone dampen and filter climate variability signals prior to recharging the water table. This thesis addresses this knowledge gap by quantifying the teleconnections between six modes of quasi-periodic climate variations and precipitation and groundwater level fluctuations within seven sand and gravel principal aquifers (PAs) in the United States. The six modes of climate variability are the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (50-80 year cycle), Pacific Decadal Oscillation (15-30 year cycle ), El Nino-Southern Oscillation (2-7 year cycle), North Atlantic Oscillation (3-6 year cycle), Pacific/North American Oscillation (<1-4 year cycle), and Arctic Oscillation (6-12 month cycle). Singular Spectrum Analysis was used to quantify climate variability signals in climatic and hydrologic time series, and the influence of soil texture, vadose zone thickness, mean infiltration flux, and infiltration period on the damping of sinusoidal signals in the vadose zone was explored using an analytical model. Results indicate that each PA reflects some influence from each of the six modes of climate variability and that the effects of these climate variations on groundwater fluctuations can be characterized spatially based on the degree of damping. There is a consistent increase (decrease) in average percent variance and lag correlation coefficients with longer (shorter) fluctuation periods. These findings highlight the importance of low frequency climate variations on hydrologic fluctuations and indicate that considering these long-term patterns will help with water resource management.
author2 Earth & Climate Sciences
format Thesis
author Velasco, Elzie Monique Lapus
spellingShingle Velasco, Elzie Monique Lapus
Relations between climate variability and groundwater fluctuations in U.S. principal aquifers
author_facet Velasco, Elzie Monique Lapus
author_sort Velasco, Elzie Monique Lapus
title Relations between climate variability and groundwater fluctuations in U.S. principal aquifers
title_short Relations between climate variability and groundwater fluctuations in U.S. principal aquifers
title_full Relations between climate variability and groundwater fluctuations in U.S. principal aquifers
title_fullStr Relations between climate variability and groundwater fluctuations in U.S. principal aquifers
title_full_unstemmed Relations between climate variability and groundwater fluctuations in U.S. principal aquifers
title_sort relations between climate variability and groundwater fluctuations in u.s. principal aquifers
publisher San Francisco State University
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10211.3/142403
geographic Arctic
Pacific
geographic_facet Arctic
Pacific
genre Arctic
North Atlantic
North Atlantic oscillation
genre_facet Arctic
North Atlantic
North Atlantic oscillation
op_source AS36 2015 GEOL .V45
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10211.3/142403
op_rights Copyright by Elzie Monique Lapuz Velasco, 2015
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