Jeffery J. McDonnell
Oregon State University
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Featured researches published by Jeffery J. McDonnell.
Water Resources Research | 2005
Kevin J. McGuire; Jeffery J. McDonnell; Markus Weiler; Carol Kendall; Brian L. McGlynn; Jeffrey M. Welker; Jan Seibert
62.4 km 2 ) that represent diverse geologic and geomorphic conditions in the western Cascade Mountains of Oregon. Our primary objective was to determine the dominant physical controls on catchment-scale water residence time and specifically test the hypothesis that residence time is related to the size of the basin. Residence times were estimated by simple convolution models that described the transfer of precipitation isotopic composition to the stream network. We found that base flow mean residence times for exponential distributions ranged from 0.8 to 3.3 years. Mean residence time showed no correlation to basin area (r 2 < 0.01) but instead was correlated (r 2 = 0.91) to catchment terrain indices representing the flow path distance and flow path gradient to the stream network. These results illustrate that landscape organization (i.e., topography) rather than basin area controls catchment-scale transport. Results from this study may provide a framework for describing scale-invariant transport across climatic and geologic conditions, whereby the internal form and structure of the basin defines the first-order control on base flow residence time.
Water Resources Research | 2002
Jim Freer; Jeffery J. McDonnell; Keith Beven; Norman E. Peters; Douglas A. Burns; Rick Hooper; Brent T. Aulenbach; Carol Kendall
We conducted a detailed study of subsurface flow and water table response coupled with digital terrain analysis (DTA) of surface and subsurface features at the hillslope scale in Panola Mountain Research Watershed (PMRW), Georgia. Subsurface storm flow contributions of macropore and matrix flow in different sections along an artificial trench face were highly variable in terms of timing, peak flow, recession characteristics, and total flow volume. The trench flow characteristics showed linkages with the spatial tensiometer response defining water table development upslope. DTA of the ground surface did not capture the observed spatial patterns of trench flow or tensiometric response. However, bedrock surface topographic indices significantly improved the estimation of spatial variation of flow at the trench. Point-scale tensiometric data were also more highly correlated with the bedrock surface-based indices. These relationships were further assessed for temporal changes throughout a rainstorm. Linkages between the bedrock indices and the trench flow and spatial water table responses improved during the wetter periods of the rainstorm, when the hillslope became more hydrologically connected. Our results clearly demonstrate that in developing a conceptual framework for understanding the mechanisms of runoff generation, local bedrock topography may be highly significant at the hillslope scale in some catchments where the bedrock surface acts as a relatively impermeable boundary.
Journal of Hydrology | 1999
Brian L. McGlynn; Jeffery J. McDonnell; Jamie Shanley; Carol Kendall
The hydrology of the near-stream riparian zone in upland humid catchments is poorly understood. We examined the spatial and temporal aspects of riparian flowpaths during snowmelt in a headwater catchment within the Sleepers River catchment in northern Vermont. A transect of 15 piezometers was sampled for Ca, Si, DOC, other major cations, and δ18O. Daily piezometric head values reflected variations in the stream hydrograph induced by melt and rainfall. The riparian zone exhibited strong upward discharge gradients. An impeding layer was identified between the till and surficial organic soil. Water solute concentrations increased toward the stream throughout the melt. Ca concentrations increased with depth and DOC concentrations decreased with depth. The concentrations of Ca in all piezometers were lower during active snowmelt than during post-melt low flow. Ca data suggest snowmelt infiltration to depth; however, only upslope piezometers exhibited snowmelt infiltration and consequent low δ18O values,(while δ18O values varied less than 0.5‰ in the deep riparian piezometers throughout the study period. Ca and δ18O values in upslope piezometers during low streamflow were comparable to Ca and δ18O in riparian piezometers during high streamflow. The upland water Ca and δ18O may explain the deep riparian Ca dilution and consistent δ18O composition. The temporal pattern in Ca and δ18O indicate that upland water moves to the stream via a lateral displacement mechanism that is enhanced by the presence of distinct soil/textural layers. Snowmelt thus initiates the flux of pre-melt, low Ca upland water to depth in the riparian zone, but itself does not appear at depth in the riparian zone during spring melt. This is despite the coincident response of upland groundwater and stream discharge.
IAHS-AISH publication | 1998
Rick Hooper; Brent T. Aulenbach; Douglas A. Burns; Jeffery J. McDonnell; Jim E Freer; Carol Kendall; Keith Beven
Water Resources Research | 2004
Taro Uchida; Yuko Asano; Takahisa Mizuyama; Jeffery J. McDonnell
Ecohydrology | 2010
H. R. Barnard; C. B. Graham; w.J. Van Verseveld; J. R. Brooks; Barbara J. Bond; Jeffery J. McDonnell
IAHS-AISH publication | 1998
Jeffery J. McDonnell; Brian L. McGlynn; K.A. Kendall; Jamie Shanley; Carol Kendall
Ecohydrology | 2011
Ajit Govind; Jing M. Chen; Jeffery J. McDonnell; Jyothi Kumari; Oliver Sonnentag
Archive | 2003
Jim E Freer; Hilary McMillan; Jeffery J. McDonnell; Keith Beven
Water Resources Research | 2005
Kevin J. McGuire; Jeffery J. McDonnell; Markus Weiler; Carol Kendall; Brian L. McGlynn; Jeffrey M. Welker; Jan Seibert