2020
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2020.125001
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Rainfall recharge thresholds in a subtropical climate determined using a regional cave drip water monitoring network

Abstract: Quantifying the combination of climatic and hydrological conditions required to generate groundwater recharge is challenging, yet of fundamental importance for groundwater resource management. Here we demonstrate a new unsaturated zone physical method of determining rainfall-recharge thresholds in karst using a regional cave drip water monitoring network. For limestones of the Upper and Lower Macleay Valley, eastern Australia, set in a subtropical climate, we observe thirty-one cave drip water recharge events … Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…The different performances between grassland and forest point towards the very simplified representation of land cover in this preliminary model (Sarrazin et al 2018). While the weak performance at the German site, which is located at~1,450 m above sea level, is most probably due to the neglecting of snow processes in the model, the model deficiencies at the Austrian site could be due to general uncertainty of the gridded input data for this region as already discussed by Baker et al (2020).…”
Section: Model Deficiencies Revealed By Evaluation With the Newly Collected Observationsmentioning
confidence: 92%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The different performances between grassland and forest point towards the very simplified representation of land cover in this preliminary model (Sarrazin et al 2018). While the weak performance at the German site, which is located at~1,450 m above sea level, is most probably due to the neglecting of snow processes in the model, the model deficiencies at the Austrian site could be due to general uncertainty of the gridded input data for this region as already discussed by Baker et al (2020).…”
Section: Model Deficiencies Revealed By Evaluation With the Newly Collected Observationsmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…The influence of antecedent soilmoisture conditions on recharge initiation could be revealed by considering a larger number of extracted soil-moisture events and their pre-event soil storages (Demand et al 2019). At those sites, where observations of groundwater, or of related fluxes like stream, discharge, spring discharge or drip in caves are available, methods to estimate recharge from soil-moisture observations by simple models (Baker et al 2020) or data-driven approaches can be explored (Arnold et al 2020). Those approaches may be supported by analysis of stable isotopes in soil water as already proven to be useful in non-karstic settings by Sprenger et al (2015).…”
Section: A Better Characterization Of Karstic Recharge Processes By Soil-moisture Dynamicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Previous studies have conducted systematic monitoring that focused on the migration process of ecological environmental information in the entire cave system (Chen & Li 2018;Yin et al 2019;Baker et al 2020). The suspended aquifer in the epikarst provides a store of water that sustains percolation flow to speleothems in caves and to cave streams over extended dry periods.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hence, drip water is important for the scienti c interpretation of information recorded by stalagmites (Pape et al 2010;Feng et al 2014;Wu et al 2014). Previous studies have conducted systematic monitoring that focused on the migration process of ecological environmental information in the entire cave system (Chen et al 2018;Yin et al 2019;Baker et al 2020). Drip water is usually supplied by meteoric precipitation and a series of important hydrogeochemical processes occur in the epikarst and inside the cave.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%