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Sara Remelli, Emma Petrella, Alessandro Chelli, Federica Delia Conti, Carlos Lozano Fondón, Fulvio Celico, Roberto Francese and Cristina Menta
Landslides are common in the Northern Apennines (Italy) and their resulting changes in soil structure affect edaphic fauna biodiversity, whose activity has concurrent impacts on soil structural stability and water-holding capacity. The aim of this study ...
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Francesco Maria De Filippi and Giuseppe Sappa
Cost-effective remediation is increasingly dependent on high-resolution site characterization (HRSC), which is supposed to be necessary prior to interventions. This paper aims to evaluate the use of low-flow purging and sampling water level data in estim...
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Dexi Zhan, Yongqi Mu, Wenxu Duan, Mingzhu Ye, Yingqiang Song, Zhenqi Song, Kaizhong Yao, Dengkuo Sun and Ziqi Ding
Soil water content is an important indicator used to maintain the ecological balance of farmland. The efficient spatial prediction of soil water content is crucial for ensuring crop growth and food production. To this end, 104 farmland soil samples were ...
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Quinn Buzzard, Jeff B. Langman, David Behrens and James G. Moberly
The heterogeneity of the fractured-basalt and interbedded-sediment aquifer along the eastern margin of the Columbia Plateau Regional Aquifer System has presented challenges to resource managers in quantifying recharge and estimating sustainable withdrawa...
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Vedran Krevh, Jannis Groh, Lutz Weihermüller, Lana Filipovic, Jasmina Defterdarovic, Zoran Kovac, Ivan Magdic, Boris Lazarevic, Thomas Baumgartl and Vilim Filipovic
Soil heterogeneities can impact hillslope hydropedological processes (e.g., portioning between infiltration and runoff), creating a need for in-depth knowledge of processes governing water dynamics and redistribution. The presented study was conducted at...
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Ivo Baselt and Thomas Heinze
Climate change is already affecting high mountain regions, such as the European Alps. Those regions will be confronted with a significant rise of temperatures above the global average, and more and heavier rain events, also during wintertime. The system ...
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Lisa Maria Ringel, Márk Somogyvári, Mohammadreza Jalali and Peter Bayer
Fractures serve as highly conductive preferential flow paths for fluids in rocks, which are difficult to exactly reconstruct in numerical models. Especially, in low-conductive rocks, fractures are often the only pathways for advection of solutes and heat...
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Simin Jiang, Jinhong Fan, Xuemin Xia, Xianwen Li and Ruicheng Zhang
The identification of unknown groundwater pollution sources and the characterization of pollution plume remains a challenging problem. In this study, we addressed this problem by a linked simulation-optimization approach. This approach couples a contamin...
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Marwan Fahs, Behshad Koohbor, Benjamin Belfort, Behzad Ataie-Ashtiani, Craig T. Simmons, Anis Younes and Philippe Ackerer
The Henry problem (HP) continues to play a useful role in theoretical and practical studies related to seawater intrusion (SWI) into coastal aquifers. The popularity of this problem is attributed to its simplicity and precision to the existence of semi-a...
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Jae-Yeol Cheong, Se-Yeong Hamm, Doo-Hyun Lim and Soo-Gin Kim
In instances of damage to engineered barriers containing nuclear waste material, surrounding bedrock is a natural barrier that retards radionuclide movement by way of adsorption and delay due to groundwater flow through highly tortuous fractured rock pat...
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