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Ephemeral Stream Water Contributions to US Drainage Networks

Colin Gleason applies process-based hydrology and geochemistry to global scales through Arctic fieldwork, satellite data, and geomorphically informed modeling. His former student Craig Brinkerhoff used UMass computers to study the role of temporary streams in U.S. drainage networks in light of changes to the Clean Water Act.

Ephemeral streams (the small headwater rivers that only flow in response to rain events) have a complicated management history in the US. Yet, we need an explicit assessment of their contributions to downstream hydrology and water quality. To answer this question, we used high-performance computing to build a model for over 22,000,000 rivers, streams, and lakes across the United States (US). This revealed unexpectedly high ephemeral contributions to flow in larger, downstream rivers. Because ephemeral streams are no longer protected under the US Clean Water Act, this work identified a pathway through which unprotected water may flow into larger, protected rivers to the potential detriment of US water quality.

Colin Gleason and Craig Brinkerhoff
Colin Gleason: Associate Professor, Civil and Environmental Engineering, UMass Amherst

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Exact Gravitational Lensing by Rotating Black Holes
Evolution of Viral Infectious Disease
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Ephemeral Stream Water Contributions to US Drainage Networks
Energy Transport and Ultrafast Spectroscopy Lab
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