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Dive into the research topics where Jan Pietroń is active.

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Featured researches published by Jan Pietroń.


Earth’s Future | 2015

Implications of freshwater flux data from the CMIP5 multimodel output across a set of Northern Hemisphere drainage basins

Arvid Bring; Shilpa M. Asokan; Fernando Jaramillo; Jerker Jarsjö; Lea Levi; Jan Pietroń; Carmen Prieto; Peter Rogberg; Georgia Destouni

The multimodel ensemble of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project, Phase 5 (CMIP5) synthesizes the latest research in global climate modeling. The freshwater system on land, particularly runoff, has so far been of relatively low priority in global climate models, despite the societal and ecosystem importance of freshwater changes, and the science and policy needs for such model output on drainage basin scales. Here we investigate the implications of CMIP5 multimodel ensemble output data for the freshwater system across a set of drainage basins in the Northern Hemisphere. Results of individual models vary widely, with even ensemble mean results differing greatly from observations and implying unrealistic long-term systematic changes in water storage and level within entire basins. The CMIP5 projections of basin-scale freshwater fluxes differ considerably more from observations and among models for the warm temperate study basins than for the Arctic and cold temperate study basins. In general, the results call for concerted research efforts and model developments for improving the understanding and modeling of the freshwater system and its change drivers. Specifically, more attention to basin-scale water flux analyses should be a priority for climate model development, and an important focus for relevant model-based advice for adaptation to climate change.


Regional Environmental Change | 2017

Patterns of soil contamination, erosion and river loading of metals in a gold mining region of northern Mongolia

Jerker Jarsjö; Sergey Chalov; Jan Pietroń; Alexey V. Alekseenko; Josefin Thorslund

Mining has become one of the main causes of increased heavy metal loading of river systems throughout the world. There is however an evident gap between assessments of soil contamination and metal release at the mined sites and estimates of river pollution. The present work focuses on Zaamar Goldfield, which is one of the largest placer gold mines in the world, located along the Tuul River, Mongolia, which ultimately drains into Lake Baikal, Russia. It combines field observations in the river basin with soil erosion modelling and aims at quantifying the contribution from natural erosion of metal-rich soil to observed increases in mass flows of metals along the Tuul River. Results show that the sediment delivery from the mining area to the Tuul River is considerably higher than the possible contribution from natural soil erosion. This is primarily due to excessive mining-related water use creating turbid wastewaters, disturbed filtering functions of deposition areas (natural sediment traps) close to the river and disturbances from infrastructures such as roads. Furthermore, relative to background levels, soils within Zaamar Goldfield contained elevated concentrations of As, Sr, Mn,V, Ni, Cu and Cr. The enhanced soil loss caused by mining-related activities can also explain observed, considerable increases in mass flows of metals in the Tuul River. The present example from Tuul River may provide useful new insights regarding the erosion and geomorphic evolution of mined areas, as well as the associated delivery of metals into stream networks.


Frontiers of Earth Science in China | 2017

Sediment transport in headwaters of a volcanic catchment—Kamchatka Peninsula case study

Sergey Chalov; Anatolii S. Tsyplenkov; Jan Pietroń; Aleksandra S. Chalova; Danila I. Shkolnyi; Jerker Jarsjö; Michael Maerker

Due to specific environmental conditions, headwater catchments located on volcanic slopes and valleys are characterized by distinctive hydrology and sediment transport patterns. However, lack of sufficient monitoring causes that the governing processes and patterns in these areas are rarely well understood. In this study, spatiotemporal water discharge and sediment transport from upstream sources was investigated in one of the numerous headwater catchments located in the lahar valleys of the Kamchatka Peninsula Sukhaya Elizovskaya River near Avachinskii and Koryakskii volcanoes. Three different subcatchments and corresponding channel types (wandering rivers within lahar valleys, mountain rivers within volcanic slopes and rivers within submountain terrains) were identified in the studied area. Our measurements from different periods of observations between years 2012–2014 showed that the studied catchment was characterized by extreme diurnal fluctuation of water discharges and sediment loads that were influenced by snowmelt patterns and high infiltration rates of the easily erodible lahar deposits. The highest recorded sediment loads were up to 9∙104 mg/L which was related to an increase of two orders of magnitude within a one day of observations. Additionally, to get a quantitative estimate of the spatial distribution of the eroded material in the volcanic substrates we applied an empirical soil erosion and sediment yield model–modified universal soil loss equation (MUSLE). The modeling results showed that even if the applications of the universal erosion model to different non-agricultural areas (e.g., volcanic catchments) can lead to irrelevant results, the MUSLE model delivered might be acceptable for non-lahar areas of the studied volcanic catchment. Overall the results of our study increase our understanding of the hydrology and associated sediment transport for prediction of risk management within headwater volcanic catchments.


Hydrological Processes | 2018

Sedimentation patterns in the Selenga River delta under changing hydroclimatic conditions

Jan Pietroń; Jeffrey A. Nittrouer; Sergey Chalov; Tian Y. Dong; N. S. Kasimov; G. Shinkareva; Jerker Jarsjö

The Selenga River delta (Russia) is a large (>600km(2)) fluvially dominated fresh water system that transfers water and sediment from an undammed drainage basin into Lake Baikal, a United Nation ...


Environmental Earth Sciences | 2015

Spatio-temporal variation of sediment transport in the Selenga River Basin, Mongolia and Russia

Sergey Chalov; Jerker Jarsjö; N. S. Kasimov; Anna O. Romanchenko; Jan Pietroń; Josefin Thorslund; Ekaterina V. Promakhova


Journal of Hydrology | 2014

Evolution of the hydro-climate system in the Lake Baikal basin

Rebecka Törnqvist; Jerker Jarsjö; Jan Pietroń; Arvid Bring; Peter Rogberg; Shilpa M. Asokan; Georgia Destouni


Regional Environmental Change | 2017

The Selenga River delta: a geochemical barrier protecting Lake Baikal waters

Sergey Chalov; Josefin Thorslund; N. S. Kasimov; Denis Aybullatov; Elena Ilyicheva; Daniel Karthe; Alexey Kositsky; M.Y. Lychagin; Jeffrey A. Nittrouer; Maxim Pavlov; Jan Pietroń; G. Shinkareva; Mikhail Tarasov; Endon Garmaev; Yosef Akhtman; Jerker Jarsjö


Journal of Hydrology | 2015

Model analyses of the contribution of in-channel processes to sediment concentration hysteresis loops

Jan Pietroń; Jerker Jarsjö; Anna O. Romanchenko; Sergey Chalov


Catena | 2017

Extreme spatial variability in riverine sediment load inputs due to soil loss in surface mining areas of the Lake Baikal basin

Jan Pietroń; Sergey Chalov; Aleksandra S. Chalova; Alexey V. Alekseenko; Jerker Jarsjö


Regional Environmental Change | 2017

Present to future sediment transport of the Brahmaputra River: reducing uncertainty in predictions and management

Sandra Fischer; Jan Pietroń; Arvid Bring; Josefin Thorslund; Jerker Jarsjö

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