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  • scattering sensitivity  (1)
  • vadose zone  (1)
  • 1
    Publication Date: 2021-07-21
    Description: Through the release of groundwater, most mountain rivers run year‐round despite their small catchments and sporadic precipitation. This makes mountain ranges important sources of reliable freshwater for downstream populations in many parts of the world. However, due to a lack of ground instrumentation, little is known about groundwater dynamics in mountainous landscapes. Recent research has shown that the amount of moisture trapped in the soil and weathered rocks in the vadose zone can significantly buffer groundwater recharge and runoff but the wider recognition of this effect on major mountain systems has not been yet established. In this study, we test whether the moisture reservoir has an impact on hydrological fluxes in a steep Himalayan catchment during three monsoon seasons. We measured an array of parameters including relative seismic velocity changes from ambient noise correlations. This noninvasive technique allows us to monitor groundwater dynamics in conjunction with classical hydrological measurements. We found that the moisture saturation in the vadose zone controls the onset of groundwater recharge and runoff and therefore determines the annual water availability supplied by monsoon precipitation. We model this dynamic using a surface layer that has a finite storage capacity that controls the connectivity of surface flux to groundwater. The extension of this concept, which is thought to apply widely in flat and undulating landscapes, to steep mountain topography with thin and discontinuous soils underlain by regolith and bedrock has important implications for mountain hydrology.
    Description: Plain Language Summary: The Nepal Himalayas supply essential water resources to a large part of the population of South Asia. Most of this water drains through a mountain groundwater reservoir that is poorly constrained. In steep landscapes, this reservoir is continuously losing water due to gravitational pull. Understanding how the reservoir fills and drains is crucial to the assessment of its sustainability and projection into the future with respect to global climate change. However, the relevant subsurface processes are generally challenging to observe due to limited access to the subsurface, particularly in steep mountain landscapes. We have used seismic ambient noise, ground vibrations continuously recorded by seismometers, to monitor the groundwater dynamics on a spatially integrated scale in a Himalayan valley. We show that the moisture content of a shallow layer controls the transfer of precipitation into the deeper groundwater reservoir during the Indian monsoon seasons. Our study highlights the need to anticipate the effects of changes of land use, soil cover conditions and rainfall regime, due to climate change, to better predict the future of freshwater resources in mountain landscapes.
    Description: Key Points: Passive seismic interferometry reveals detailed insights into subsurface water storage variability in the Nepal Himalayas Vadose zone moisture saturation controls river discharge generation in a steep mountain landscape Freshwater delivery from high mountains is strongly dependent on subsurface conditions, which are rarely considered in these environments
    Description: GFZ HART program
    Keywords: 551.49 ; Himalayas ; mountain hydrology ; seismic noise | subsurface moisture ; summer monsoon ; vadose zone
    Type: article
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2021-07-04
    Description: We present observations on a new precursory phase of seismic waves scattered in the deep Earth. This phase arrives prior to the PKPab wave at epicentral distances larger than 155°, and we call it PKPab precursor. We show that the presence of the PKPab precursor is a necessary consequence of scattering in D″, which is the commonly accepted cause of the PKPdf precursor at distances smaller than 145°. PKPdf waves that propagate through the inner core should arrive before the PKPab precursor but those, are strongly attenuated in the inner core at frequencies between 4 Hz and 8 Hz used here, making the PKPab precursor the earliest teleseismic signal at distances larger than 155°. Calculated PKPab precursor sensitivity kernel shows that this phase is mostly sensitive to scattering along the closest PKPbc path between source and receiver. It can thus help to constrain the lateral distribution of heterogeneity along D″.
    Description: Plain Language Summary: A new discovered seismic signal recorded far away from earthquakes, by stations on the other side of Earth, will help to study the properties of the core–mantle boundary. We use high frequencies at which seismic waves do not propagate through the Earth's inner core but are instead propagated around it by deflection at heterogeneity located along the core–mantle boundary.
    Description: Key Points: PKP precursor observed at distance beyond 155°. D″ scattering of teleseismic waves at 6 Hz. Radiative transfer simulation used to locate regions of heterogeneity.
    Description: Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst (DAAD) http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001655
    Keywords: 551.22 ; CMB ; deep Earth ; PKP precursor ; radiative transfer simulation ; scattering sensitivity ; wave scattering
    Type: article
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