The Effect of Atmospheric Pressure Variations on the Suprapermafrost Groundwater Level and Runoff of Small Rivers in the Anadyr Lowlands, Northeast Russia

The present-day models of the hydrological regime of soils and river basins do not include a hypothesis regarding the effect of atmospheric pressure on hydrological processes (baric effect), which is assumed negligible. However, their manifestations are likely, considering the mechanical and hydroph...

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Published in:Water
Main Authors: Oleg D. Tregubov, Boris I. Gartsman, Vladimir V. Shamov, Lyudmila S. Lebedeva, Anna M. Tarbeeva
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3390/w14193066
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spelling ftmdpi:oai:mdpi.com:/2073-4441/14/19/3066/ 2023-08-20T03:59:37+02:00 The Effect of Atmospheric Pressure Variations on the Suprapermafrost Groundwater Level and Runoff of Small Rivers in the Anadyr Lowlands, Northeast Russia Oleg D. Tregubov Boris I. Gartsman Vladimir V. Shamov Lyudmila S. Lebedeva Anna M. Tarbeeva agris 2022-09-29 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.3390/w14193066 EN eng Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute Hydrology https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/w14193066 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Water; Volume 14; Issue 19; Pages: 3066 suprapermafrost groundwater atmosphere pressure streamflow peat soil tundra Northeast Asia Text 2022 ftmdpi https://doi.org/10.3390/w14193066 2023-08-01T06:41:18Z The present-day models of the hydrological regime of soils and river basins do not include a hypothesis regarding the effect of atmospheric pressure on hydrological processes (baric effect), which is assumed negligible. However, their manifestations are likely, considering the mechanical and hydrophysical properties of shallow peat-bog soils (plasticity and elasticity, high moisture-retention capacity, the ability to swell and shrink) and the important role of undecomposed plant remains. The effect of atmospheric pressure variations on level changes in a suprapermafrost aquifer was detected using field and laboratory experiments in shallow peat and peaty tundra soils in the Anadyr Lowlands, Northeast Russia. One can see this effect in the runoff regime of 1st–4th orders streams. The manifestations of this phenomenon can differ, and in particular, they can be directed oppositely. The changes in the level and storage of suprapermafrost gravitational water could be caused only by synchronous (in phase opposition) changes in capillary water fringe above the groundwater table. To explain the observed phenomena, a conceptual model is developed based on the analysis of the balance of forces and water balance in a system of elastic capillaries. Not being complete and perfect, the model reproduces qualitatively the main observed cases of the response to air pressure changes, proving the effect itself, and suggests the likely localization of its mechanisms. A shallow suprapermafrost groundwater table in contact with the peat bottom, as well as incomplete (below the full moisture capacity) water saturation of peat soil horizons, appear to be circumstances of the baric effect on tundra shallow subsurface aquifers. Favorable conditions for the baric effect in a soil profile include a high elasticity of peat-soil matrix, high and variable values of porosity and water yield of peat and moss cover, and, at the catchment scale, a high proportion of coverage by these types of soils. A full-scale study of a mechanism of baric ... Text Anadyr Anadyr' Tundra MDPI Open Access Publishing Anadyr ENVELOPE(177.510,177.510,64.734,64.734) Anadyr’ ENVELOPE(176.233,176.233,64.882,64.882) Water 14 19 3066
institution Open Polar
collection MDPI Open Access Publishing
op_collection_id ftmdpi
language English
topic suprapermafrost groundwater
atmosphere pressure
streamflow
peat soil
tundra
Northeast Asia
spellingShingle suprapermafrost groundwater
atmosphere pressure
streamflow
peat soil
tundra
Northeast Asia
Oleg D. Tregubov
Boris I. Gartsman
Vladimir V. Shamov
Lyudmila S. Lebedeva
Anna M. Tarbeeva
The Effect of Atmospheric Pressure Variations on the Suprapermafrost Groundwater Level and Runoff of Small Rivers in the Anadyr Lowlands, Northeast Russia
topic_facet suprapermafrost groundwater
atmosphere pressure
streamflow
peat soil
tundra
Northeast Asia
description The present-day models of the hydrological regime of soils and river basins do not include a hypothesis regarding the effect of atmospheric pressure on hydrological processes (baric effect), which is assumed negligible. However, their manifestations are likely, considering the mechanical and hydrophysical properties of shallow peat-bog soils (plasticity and elasticity, high moisture-retention capacity, the ability to swell and shrink) and the important role of undecomposed plant remains. The effect of atmospheric pressure variations on level changes in a suprapermafrost aquifer was detected using field and laboratory experiments in shallow peat and peaty tundra soils in the Anadyr Lowlands, Northeast Russia. One can see this effect in the runoff regime of 1st–4th orders streams. The manifestations of this phenomenon can differ, and in particular, they can be directed oppositely. The changes in the level and storage of suprapermafrost gravitational water could be caused only by synchronous (in phase opposition) changes in capillary water fringe above the groundwater table. To explain the observed phenomena, a conceptual model is developed based on the analysis of the balance of forces and water balance in a system of elastic capillaries. Not being complete and perfect, the model reproduces qualitatively the main observed cases of the response to air pressure changes, proving the effect itself, and suggests the likely localization of its mechanisms. A shallow suprapermafrost groundwater table in contact with the peat bottom, as well as incomplete (below the full moisture capacity) water saturation of peat soil horizons, appear to be circumstances of the baric effect on tundra shallow subsurface aquifers. Favorable conditions for the baric effect in a soil profile include a high elasticity of peat-soil matrix, high and variable values of porosity and water yield of peat and moss cover, and, at the catchment scale, a high proportion of coverage by these types of soils. A full-scale study of a mechanism of baric ...
format Text
author Oleg D. Tregubov
Boris I. Gartsman
Vladimir V. Shamov
Lyudmila S. Lebedeva
Anna M. Tarbeeva
author_facet Oleg D. Tregubov
Boris I. Gartsman
Vladimir V. Shamov
Lyudmila S. Lebedeva
Anna M. Tarbeeva
author_sort Oleg D. Tregubov
title The Effect of Atmospheric Pressure Variations on the Suprapermafrost Groundwater Level and Runoff of Small Rivers in the Anadyr Lowlands, Northeast Russia
title_short The Effect of Atmospheric Pressure Variations on the Suprapermafrost Groundwater Level and Runoff of Small Rivers in the Anadyr Lowlands, Northeast Russia
title_full The Effect of Atmospheric Pressure Variations on the Suprapermafrost Groundwater Level and Runoff of Small Rivers in the Anadyr Lowlands, Northeast Russia
title_fullStr The Effect of Atmospheric Pressure Variations on the Suprapermafrost Groundwater Level and Runoff of Small Rivers in the Anadyr Lowlands, Northeast Russia
title_full_unstemmed The Effect of Atmospheric Pressure Variations on the Suprapermafrost Groundwater Level and Runoff of Small Rivers in the Anadyr Lowlands, Northeast Russia
title_sort effect of atmospheric pressure variations on the suprapermafrost groundwater level and runoff of small rivers in the anadyr lowlands, northeast russia
publisher Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
publishDate 2022
url https://doi.org/10.3390/w14193066
op_coverage agris
long_lat ENVELOPE(177.510,177.510,64.734,64.734)
ENVELOPE(176.233,176.233,64.882,64.882)
geographic Anadyr
Anadyr’
geographic_facet Anadyr
Anadyr’
genre Anadyr
Anadyr'
Tundra
genre_facet Anadyr
Anadyr'
Tundra
op_source Water; Volume 14; Issue 19; Pages: 3066
op_relation Hydrology
https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/w14193066
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.3390/w14193066
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