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Atmospheric Groundwater Forcing of a Subterranean Estuary: A Seasonal Seawater Recirculation Process

Donald A. Beebe, Mary Brandon Huettemann, Bret M. Webb, William T. Jackson

2022Geophysical Research Letters15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Here we isolate groundwater responses to atmospheric forcing of surface water levels by relating anomalies in coastal aquifer hydraulic head time‐series to weather events. Our results demonstrate that atmospheric forcing has a greater effect on groundwater exchange and extended residence time over astronomical tidal pumping at times. During winter, atmospheric groundwater forcing was associated with winter storm passage and had a recurrence interval of approximately 7 days. During summer, atmospheric groundwater forcing was limited to weak diurnal atmospheric convection and infrequent tropical cyclone activity. Because winter storms and tropical cyclones commonly produce precipitation, atmospheric groundwater forcing can synergize with the timing of meteoric recharge producing periods of intense submarine groundwater discharge.

Topics & Concepts

GroundwaterSubmarine groundwater dischargeForcing (mathematics)Environmental scienceTropical cycloneAquiferPrecipitationGroundwater rechargeAtmospheric sciencesHydrology (agriculture)ClimatologyGeologyMeteorologyPhysicsGeotechnical engineeringGroundwater and Isotope GeochemistryGeophysics and Gravity MeasurementsMethane Hydrates and Related Phenomena
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