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@ARTICLE{Brunner:840433,
author = {Brunner, Philip and Therrien, René and Renard, Philippe
and Simmons, Craig T. and Franssen, Harrie-Jan Hendricks},
title = {{A}dvances in understanding river-groundwater interactions},
journal = {Reviews of geophysics},
volume = {55},
number = {3},
issn = {8755-1209},
address = {Hoboken, NJ},
publisher = {Wiley},
reportid = {FZJ-2017-07950},
pages = {818 - 854},
year = {2017},
abstract = {River-groundwater interactions are at the core of a wide
range of major contemporary challenges, including the
provision of high-quality drinking water in sufficient
quantities, the loss of biodiversity in river ecosystems, or
the management of environmental flow regimes. This paper
reviews state of the art approaches in characterizing and
modeling river and groundwater interactions. Our review
covers a wide range of approaches, including remote sensing
to characterize the streambed, emerging methods to measure
exchange fluxes between rivers and groundwater, and
developments in several disciplines relevant to the
river-groundwater interface. We discuss approaches for
automated calibration, and real-time modeling, which improve
the simulation and understanding of river-groundwater
interactions. Although the integration of these various
approaches and disciplines is advancing, major research gaps
remain to be filled to allow more complete and quantitative
integration across disciplines. New possibilities for
generating realistic distributions of streambed properties,
in combination with more data and novel data types, have
great potential to improve our understanding and predictive
capabilities for river-groundwater systems, especially in
combination with the integrated simulation of the river and
groundwater flow as well as calibration methods.
Understanding the implications of different data types and
resolution, the development of highly instrumented field
sites, ongoing model development, and the ultimate
integration of models and data are important future research
areas. These developments are required to expand our current
understanding to do justice to the complexity of natural
systems.},
cin = {IBG-3},
ddc = {550},
cid = {I:(DE-Juel1)IBG-3-20101118},
pnm = {255 - Terrestrial Systems: From Observation to Prediction
(POF3-255)},
pid = {G:(DE-HGF)POF3-255},
typ = {PUB:(DE-HGF)16},
UT = {WOS:000413536800006},
doi = {10.1002/2017RG000556},
url = {https://juser.fz-juelich.de/record/840433},
}