Top Banner
Reconstructing Water Quality Histories in Western Reservoirs ul Gremillion, Ph.D., P.E. sociate Professor vil & Environmental Engineering Department rthern Arizona University
21

Reconstructing Water Quality Histories in Western Reservoirs

Jan 05, 2016

Download

Documents

phyre

Reconstructing Water Quality Histories in Western Reservoirs. Paul Gremillion, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil & Environmental Engineering Department Northern Arizona University. Content. Sedimentation in Reservoirs Direct Indicators of Reservoir History - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Reconstructing Water Quality Histories in Western Reservoirs

Reconstructing Water Quality Histories in Western Reservoirs

Paul Gremillion, Ph.D., P.E.Associate ProfessorCivil & Environmental Engineering DepartmentNorthern Arizona University

Page 2: Reconstructing Water Quality Histories in Western Reservoirs

Content

• Sedimentation in Reservoirs• Direct Indicators of Reservoir History• Proxy Indicators of Environmental Conditions• Case Studies

Page 3: Reconstructing Water Quality Histories in Western Reservoirs

Sedimentation in Reservoirs

Source: Reservoir Limnology, Thornton et al.

Page 4: Reconstructing Water Quality Histories in Western Reservoirs

http://www.gly.uga.edu/railsback/1121DeltaProgradation.jpeg

Page 5: Reconstructing Water Quality Histories in Western Reservoirs
Page 6: Reconstructing Water Quality Histories in Western Reservoirs

Direct Indicators of Reservoir History

Page 7: Reconstructing Water Quality Histories in Western Reservoirs

Roosevelt Lake, Arizona

Page 8: Reconstructing Water Quality Histories in Western Reservoirs

Roosevelt Lake, Arizona

Page 9: Reconstructing Water Quality Histories in Western Reservoirs

Roosevelt Lake, Arizona

Page 10: Reconstructing Water Quality Histories in Western Reservoirs
Page 11: Reconstructing Water Quality Histories in Western Reservoirs
Page 12: Reconstructing Water Quality Histories in Western Reservoirs

Direct Analysis of Sediments Can Reveal:1. Rate of loss in storage capacity.

Page 13: Reconstructing Water Quality Histories in Western Reservoirs

Direct Analysis of Sediments Can Reveal:1. Rate of loss in storage capacity.2. How the rate of capacity loss may change

with climate change.

Page 14: Reconstructing Water Quality Histories in Western Reservoirs

Direct Analysis of Sediments Can Reveal:1. Rate of loss in storage capacity.2. How the rate of capacity loss may change

with climate change.3. Erosion patterns associated with wildfire.

Page 15: Reconstructing Water Quality Histories in Western Reservoirs

Proxy Indicators

Objective Analyte / Proxy

Chronology • 137Cs or 239Pu ~ 50 yrs• 210Pb ~150 yrs• 14C ~100 – 15k yrs• Event-based chronology

Primary Productivity • Diatoms• Biogenic silica• 13C (in some systems)

Anoxia • Ratios of redox-sensitive metals• Molybdenum stable isotopes• Benthic invertebrates

Fire • Charcoal• Magnetic susceptibility

Page 16: Reconstructing Water Quality Histories in Western Reservoirs

Proxy Indicators

Objective Analyte / Proxy

Hydrology • Magnetic susceptibility• Inorganic ion ratios• Particle size distributions• Compound-specific isotopes

Sediment Redistribution • Acoustic surveys• 137Cs or 239Pu inventories• Particle size distributions

Ecosystem Assemblages • Pollen• Diatoms

Atmospheric Pollutants • Chemical extraction + elemental / isotopic analysis

Page 17: Reconstructing Water Quality Histories in Western Reservoirs

Case Study: Mercury Deposition

Page 18: Reconstructing Water Quality Histories in Western Reservoirs

Case Study: Mercury Deposition

Page 19: Reconstructing Water Quality Histories in Western Reservoirs

Case Study: Watson Lake, Arizona

Objective:Collect and analyze sediment cores from Watson Lake to detect historical changes in• Nutrient loading• Primary productivity / trophic

state• Sources of nutrients

Page 20: Reconstructing Water Quality Histories in Western Reservoirs

Case Study: Watson Lake, ArizonaAnalytical Approach:• Changes in nutrient loading:

TN, TKN, TP• Changes in source of nitrogen:

Nitrogen-15• Changes in source of organic

matter: N/P, C/N, Carbon-13• Changes in primary

productivity / trophic state: Carbon-13, TP

Page 21: Reconstructing Water Quality Histories in Western Reservoirs

Conclusions

Sediment records in western reservoirs tend to be high in information content:• Magnitude and effects of erosion events.• Changes in water quality.• Changes in watershed characteristics.• Patterns of atmospheric deposition to

watersheds.