The annual Sciences Student Research Symposium started in 2006
2023
The 17th Annual Hydrologic Sciences Symposium
From Source to Sink: Reimagining the Applied Hydrologic Sciences
April 12-13, 2023inS228and online.
PDF VERSIONof the schedule.
Attending remotely? Details will be emailedtoregistered attendees.
ϳܱپDzԲ?hydrosymposium@colorado.edu
The 17th Annual Hydrologic Sciences Symposium at CU 鶹ӰԺ is organized by students affiliated with the interdisciplinary Hydrologic Sciences Graduate Program and isopen to all aspects of hydrologic sciences; interdisciplinary entries are particularly encouraged (e.g. hydrogeology, hydroecology, aquatic biology, biogeochemistry, environmental and water resource engineering, etc.).
The symposium provides a great opportunity and friendly setting for students to learn what their fellow students and researchers are doing, both within and outside their sub-discipline. Abstracts are accepted from graduate and undergraduate students, researchers, and faculty at CU 鶹ӰԺ and other colleges anduniversities as well as Colorado hydroscience researchers from the community and institutions such as USGS, NOAA, or NCAR.
Who is invited?
The Symposium welcomes anyone interested in hydrologic sciences.
Present Your Research
Student abstracts were accepted until April 8, 2023.Questions? Email us athydrosymposium@colorado.edu
Keynote Address
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Thomas AdamsSenior Hydrometeorological Advisor at the United States Agency for International Development
The evolution of Hydrologic Forecasting — serendipity from failure and when things don’t quite work out
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Alicia WilsonProfessor of Hydrogeology in the School of the Earth, Ocean, and Environment at the University of South Carolina
Please check your assumptions at the coastline: 15 years of wading through salt marshes
Guest Speakers
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Mazdak ArabiOne Water Solutions Institute, Colorado State University
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Sharon Bywater-ReyesDepartment of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, University of Northern Colorado
The Good, The Bad, The Ugly: Lessons Learned from Colorado River Restoration Projects
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Hillary HamannԻMeghan McCarroll,Department of Geography and the Environment, Universityof Denver
Impacts of innovative water security solutions on water literacy: A case-study from Aurora, Colorado
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Michael KerwinDepartment of Geography and the Environment, University of Denver
Mega-drought Demands Mega-changes: Can the Western USA Learn from South Africa’s Response to the Day Zero Drought?
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Upmanu LallColumbia University Water Center
The Co-evolution of Humans, Climate, Water, Earth and Biota: The Next Chapter?
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Dan ScottWatershed Science & Engineering
Understanding the Wood Regime to Support Stream Management
2023Student Symposium Steering Committee
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Abigail EcklandGEOL PhD 2024
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Taylor JohanemanGEOG PhD 2026
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Parth ModiCEAE PhD 2023
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Millie SpencerGEOG PhD 2026
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Prasad ThotaCEAE PhD 2025
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David WoodsonCEAE PhD 2023
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Anna WrightENVS PhD 2025
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Holly BarnardHydrologic Sciences Program Co-director
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Mike GooseffHydrologic Sciences Program Co-director
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Sarah RogersHydrologic Sciences Program Coordinator
Hosted by
- - Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research
Sponsors
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- Hydrologic Sciences and Water Resources Engineering Seminar Series
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CEAE- Civil, Environmental & Architectural Engineering
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ճ- Environmental Studies
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GEOG- Geography
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GEOL- Geological Sciences
2022
The 16th Annual Symposium took place April 7-8, 2022in SEEC and on Zoom.
The Annual Hydrologic Sciences Symposium at CU 鶹ӰԺ is organized by students affiliated with the interdisciplinary Hydrologic Sciences Graduate Program and isopen to all aspects of hydrologic sciences; interdisciplinary entries are particularly encouraged (e.g. hydrogeology, hydroecology, aquatic biology, biogeochemistry, environmental and water resource engineering, etc.).
The symposium provides a great opportunity and friendly setting for students to learn what their fellow students and researchers are doing, both within and outside their sub-discipline. Abstracts are accepted from graduate and undergraduate students, researchers and faculty at CU 鶹ӰԺ and other Colorado colleges anduniversities as well as Colorado hydroscience researchers from the community and institutions such as USGS, NOAA, or NCAR.
2022 Schedule
Keynote Speakers
Melisa DiazWoods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Danica Schaffer-Smith The Nature Conservancy and Arizona State University
Invited Speakers
Melissa FosterUS Bureau of Reclamation
Adrienne KroepschColorado School of Mines
Katherine LiningerDepartment of Geography, CU 鶹ӰԺ
Ben LivnehDepartment of Civil Engineering, CU 鶹ӰԺ
Nicole RowanColorado Department of Public Health and Environment
Sara SanchezDepartment of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences, CU鶹ӰԺ
Vicki ScharnhorstTetra Tech
Joel SholtesColorado Mesa University
Willem VervoortSchool of Life and Environmental Sciences, The University of Sydney
Michelle WalvoordUS Geologic Survey
Steve WondzellUS Forest Service
2021-2022 Student Steering Committee
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Dylan BlaskeyCVEN PhD 2024
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Devon DunmireATOCPhD 2022
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Abigail EcklandGEOL PhD 2024
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Natasha HarveyGEOG MS 2022
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Taylor JohanemanGEOG MS 2022
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Anna WrightENVS PhD 2025
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Holly BarnardHydrologic Sciences Program Co-director
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Mike GooseffHydrologic Sciences Program Co-director
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Sarah RogersHydrologic Sciences Program Coordinator
Hosted by
- - Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research
Participating Units
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ATOC- Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
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CEAE- Civil, Environmental & Architectural Engineering
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EBIO- Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
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ճ- Environmental Studies
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GEOG- Geography
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GEOL- Geological Sciences
2021
The 15th Annual Symposium took place April 8-9, 2021 on Zoom.
Theme: IN HOT WATER: Climate Change and Water Resources
Keynote Speakers
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Jim CloernUnited States Geological Survey
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McKenzie SkilesUniversity of Utah
Guest Speakers
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Aditi BhaskarColorado State University
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Nicole Herman-MercerUnited States Geological Survey
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Kim HuttonCity of 鶹ӰԺ
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Joseph KasprzykUniversity of Colorado - 鶹ӰԺ
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Pat KociolekUniversity of Colorado - 鶹ӰԺ
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Steve LozarConfederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes
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Matt MillerUnited States Geological Survey
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Todd MitchellSwinomishIndian Tribal Community
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Mark RaleighOregon State University
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Nicole SilkRiver Network
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Crystal Tulley-CordovaNavajo Nation
Steering Committee
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Dylan BlaskeyCVEN PhD 2024
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Carli BruckerCVEN PhD 2023
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Ethan BurnsGEOG MA 2022
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Holly BarnardHydrologic Sciences Program Co-director
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Mike GooseffHydrologic Sciences Program Co-director
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Sarah RogersProgram Coordinator
Hosted by
- CWEST- Center for Water, Earth Science and Technology
- - Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research
Participating Units
- CU Graduate School
- ATOC- Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
- CEAE- Civil, Environmental & Architectural Engineering
- EBIO- Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
- ENVS- Environmental Studies
- GEOG- Geography
- GEOL- Geological Sciences
2020
cancelled due to the COVID19 Pandemic
2019
2019Theme:The Power of Water
Location
SEEC Auditorium Room 120, CU 鶹ӰԺ East Campus
Abstracts
- Submission opens 21Feb, 2019.
- Abstract deadline 22Mar, 2019.
- Registerand Submit Abstract Here
- Emailhydrogrd@colorado.edufor any questions or assistance
Keynote Speakers
- Rosemary Carroll: Associate Professor of Hydrology, Desert Research Institute (DRI).
- Irena Creed: Executive Director and Professor, School of Environment and Sustainability, University of Saskatchewan.
- Matthew Rodell: Chief of Hydrologic Sciences, NASA, Goddard Space Flight Center.
- Arash Zamyadi:Assistant Professor, Polytechnique Montréal, University of Montreal, Canada.
Invited Speakers
- Lisa Dilling: Associate Professor of Environmental Studies and Director of Western Water Assessment, 鶹ӰԺ.
- Brian Ebel: Research Hydrologist, Water Mission Area, U.S. Geological Survey.
- Douglas Kenney: Senior Research Associate, Getches-Wilkinson Natural Resources Law Center and Director of the Western Water Policy Program, 鶹ӰԺ.
- John McCray: Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Colorado School of Mines.
- Daniel McGrath: Assistant Professor of Geosciences, Colorado State University.
- Donald Rosenberry: Research Hydrologist, Water Mission Area, U.S. Geological Survey.
- Collette Wilfong: Environmental Education Intern, Geoscientist-in-Parks Program, Rocky Mountain National Park.
Hosted by
- CWEST- Center for Water, Earth Science and Technology
- INSTAAR- Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research
Participating Units
- CU Graduate School
- ATOC- Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
- CEAE- Civil, Environmental & Architectural Engineering
- EBIO- Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
- ENVS- Environmental Studies
- GEOG- Geography
- GEOL- Geological Sciences
Overview
The symposium consists of posters and presentations by CU-鶹ӰԺ students (graduate and undergraduate) as well as presentations by faculty and 鶹ӰԺ area researchers (ie USGS, NOAA, NCAR). In addition, there will be keynote and guest speakers by influential members of the hydrosciences field.
The annual symposium provides a great opportunity and friendly setting for students to learn what their fellow students and researchers are doing, both within and outside their sub-discipline.
2018
2018 Theme
Hydrology Horizons:
Innovations in Water Science
Location
SEEC Auditorium Room 120, CU 鶹ӰԺ East Campus
Abstracts
- Submission opens 19 Feb, 2018.
- Abstract deadline 23 Mar, 2018.
- Emailhydrogrd@colorado.edufor a link to the abstract submission page.
Keynote Speakers
- Masaki Hayashi: Professor of Geoscience, University of Calgary; 2018 Henry Darcy Lecturer.
- Erin Hotchkiss: Assistant Professor of Biology, Virginia Tech.
- Cindy Paulson: Senior VP & Chief Technical Officer, Brown & Caldwell.
Local Guest Speakers
- Jennifer Back: National Wild & Scenic Rivers Program Co-Lead, NPS.
- Rebecca Barnes: Assistant Professor of Env. Science, Colorado College.
- Tzahi Cath: Professor of Engineering, Colorado School of Mines.
- Sheila Murphy: Research Hydrologist, U.S. Geological Survey.
- Sara Rathburn: Professor of Geology, Colorado State University.
- Mike SanClements: Scientist, National Ecological Observatory network.
CU Professor Guest Speakers
- Katja Friedrich: Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences Department.
- Eve-Lyn Hinckley: Environmental Studies Program.
- Joe Ryan: Civil, Environmental, and Architectural Engineering Department.
Hosted by
- CWEST- Center for Water, Earth Science and Technology
- INSTAAR- Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research
Participating Units
- CU Graduate School
- ATOC- Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
- CEAE- Civil, Environmental & Architectural Engineering
- EBIO- Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
- ENVS- Environmental Studies
- GEOG- Geography
- GEOL- Geological Sciences
Overview
The symposium consists of posters and presentations by CU-鶹ӰԺ students (graduate and undergraduate) as well as presentations by faculty and 鶹ӰԺ area researchers (ie USGS, NOAA, NCAR). In addition, there will be keynote and guest speakers by influential members of the hydrosciences field.
The annual symposium provides a great opportunity and friendly setting for students to learn what their fellow students and researchers are doing, both within and outside their sub-discipline.
Who's Invited?
The Symposium is open to all CU-鶹ӰԺ students (grad & undergrad) and faculty working in any aspect of hydrologic sciences, especially those doing interdisciplinary research (e.g. hydrogeology, hydroecology, aquatic biology, biogeochemistry, environmental and water resource engineering, etc.). We also invite hydroscience researchers in the 鶹ӰԺ area to submit an abstract (ie, USGS, NOAA, NCAR). Submitting a poster or talk that you have already presented at another conference is fine, as long as it does not violate an agreement you made with the other conference. Making a presentation of a collaborative study for which you are not first author is fine too, as long as you made a substantial contribution and are familiar with all aspects of the study.
2017
The 2017 Symposium will take place April 6-7, 2017
Hydroscience presentationsby students, faculty, and 鶹ӰԺ-area researchers.Keynotes and guest talksby distinguished scientists.
2017 Theme
Collaboration and Connections:
Protecting and Restoring Water Resources
Location
SEEC Auditorium Room 120, CU 鶹ӰԺ East Campus
Abstracts
- Submission opens 20 Feb, 2017.
- Abstract deadline 10 Mar, 2017.
- Emailhydrogrd@colorado.edufor a link to the abstract submission page.
Keynote Speakers
- Jill Baron: Senior Research Ecologist, U.S. Geological Survey, Colorado State University - Natural Resource Ecology Laboratory
"Scaling Nitrogen Effects and Management Issues from Small Watersheds to the Globe: Towards an International Nitrogen Management System" - Laurel Larsen: Assistant Professor of Physical Geography, University of California, Berkeley
"Unraveling Complexity from Two Directions: Hydroecological Systems Seen Through the Lenses of Modeling and Data" - Otto Strack: Professor of Civil, Environmental, and Geo-Engineering, University of Minnesota
"Application of Elementary Solutions in Groundwater Modeling" - Brad Udall: Senior Water and Climate Research Scientist/Scholar, Colorado State University - Colorado Water Institute
"The Collision of 19th Century Water Law, 20th Century Water Infrastructure and 21st Century Climate Change: Navigating the New Realities"
Guest Speakers
- Laura Belanger: Water Resources and Environmental Engineer, Western Resource Advocates
"Engineering and the Environment: Informing and Influencing Policies and Projects" - Anne Castle: Senior Fellow, Getches-Wilkinson Center for Natural Resources, Energy, and the Environment, University of Colorado, 鶹ӰԺ
"The Colorado River: Where Water Scarcity Sparks Collaboration" - James Eklund: Director, Colorado Water Conservation Board
"Implementing Colorado's Water Plan"
Participating Units
Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research (INSTAAR) - Center for Water, Earth Science and Technology (CWEST) -CU Graduate School- Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences (ATOC) - Civil, Environmental & Architectural Engineering (CEAE) - Ecology and Evolutionary Biology (EBIO) - Environmental Studies (ENVS) -Geography (GEOG) - Geological Sciences (GEOL)
Overview
The symposium consists of posters and presentations by CU-鶹ӰԺ students (graduate and undergraduate) as well as presentations by faculty and 鶹ӰԺ area researchers (ie USGS, NOAA, NCAR). In addition, there will be keynote and guest speakers by influential members of the hydrosciences field.
The annual symposium provides a great opportunity and friendly setting for students to learn what their fellow students and researchers are doing, both within and outside their sub-discipline.
Who's Invited?
The Symposium is open to all CU-鶹ӰԺ students (grad & undergrad) and faculty working in any aspect of hydrologic sciences, especially those doing interdisciplinary research (e.g. hydrogeology, hydroecology, aquatic biology, biogeochemistry, environmental and water resource engineering, etc.). We also invite hydroscience researchers in the 鶹ӰԺ area to submit an abstract (ie, USGS, NOAA, NCAR). Submitting a poster or talk that you have already presented at another conference is fine, as long as it does not violate an agreement you made with the other conference. Making a presentation of a collaborative study for which you are not first author is fine too, as long as you made a substantial contribution and are familiar with all aspects of the study.More information
Abstracts should be no longer than 3000 characters (about 400 words). Up to three figures may be submitted. See the "" page for more details. Other questions? Email us athydrogrd@colorado.edu
2016
11th Annual Hydrologic Sciences Student Research Symposium
March 31 and April 1, 2016
University Memorial Center
鶹ӰԺ
Welcome
The Hydrologic Sciences Graduate Program at the 鶹ӰԺ welcomes you to the Eleventh Annual Hydrologic Sciences Research Symposium. Thank you for joining us in showcasing the diversity of ongoing hydrologic research at and around the University of Colorado. Keynote speakers Matt Cohen, Amy East, Tom Painter and Rob Runkel will address issues at the forefront of hydrology. Talks and posters from students and invited faculty include projects on measuring and modeling snowpack and soil moisture dynamics, surface water and groundwater flow and depletion, biogeochemical processes, hydrologic engineering, and the politics that have shaped our past and dictate the future of hydrology. Join us as we celebrate hydrologic research.
Overview
The symposium consists of posters and presentations by CU-鶹ӰԺ students (graduate and undergraduate) as well as presentations by faculty and 鶹ӰԺ area researchers (ie USGS, NOAA, NCAR). In addition, there will be keynote speakers by influential members of the hydrosciences field.
The annual symposium provides a great opportunity and friendly setting for students to learn what their fellow students and researchers are doing, both within and outside their sub-discipline.
2016 Keynote Speakers
- Matthew Cohen, School of Forest Resources and Conservation, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL
- Amy East, U.S. Geological Survey, Pacific Coastal and Marine Science Center, Santa Cruz, CA
- Thomas Painter, Jet Propulsion Laboratory/California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA
- Robert Runkel, U.S. Geological Survey, Colorado Water Science Center, Denver, CO
Sponsors
Civil, Environmental & Architectural Engineering - Geography - Geological Sciences - Environmental Studies - Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research - CU Graduate School
Many Thanks to
The planning committee: Anna Bergstrom, Jordan Carroll, Keith Jennings, and Christa Torrens
Faculty Advisors: Michael Gooseff and John Pitlick
Who's Invited?
The Symposium is open to all CU-鶹ӰԺ students (grad & undergrad) and faculty working in any aspect of hydrologic sciences, especially those doing interdisciplinary research (e.g. hydrogeology, hydroecology, aquatic biology, biogeochemistry, environmental and water resource engineering, etc.). We also invite hydroscience researchers in the 鶹ӰԺ area to submit an abstract (ie, USGS, NOAA, NCAR). Submitting a poster or talk that you have already presented at another conference is fine, as long as it does not violate an agreement you made with the other conference. Making a presentation of a collaborative study for which you are not first author is fine too, as long as you made a substantial contribution and are familiar with all aspects of the study.
More information
Abstracts should be no longer than 3000 characters (about 400 words). Up to three figures may be submitted. Use the links in the upper right sidebar to submit your abstract and for more details.
9:00 | Coffee & Muffins/Registration | |
9:45 | John Pitlick |
Welcome Address |
10:00 | Peter Shellito |
Evaluation of SMAP soil moisture drying rates |
10:20 | Daphne Szutu |
Linking sap flow and stable isotope techniques to understand transpiration dynamics in a semiarid shrubland |
10:40 | Holly Barnard |
Examining Diel Patterns of Soil and Xylem Moisture Using Electrical Resistivity Imaging |
11:00 | Matthew Cohen |
Keynote address- A Sensor Driven Transformation in the Hydrologic Sciences: How New Tools are Enabling New Insights in Catchment and River Processes |
12:00 | Lunch/Poster Session(pizza and drinks provided) | |
1:00 | Mark Schutte |
Geomorphic Response of Fall River to the 2013 Flood |
1:20 | Charles Shobe |
Big Blocks And River Incision: A Numerical Modeling Perspective |
1:40 | Amy East |
Keynote address- Fluvial Response to Dam Removal: A Synthesis Perspective |
2:40 | 20 min break | |
3:00 | Alia Khan |
Dissolved black carbon in Antarctic lakes: Chemical signatures of past and present sources |
3:20 | Garrett Rue |
Chemostatic Cradle to Grave: Dissolved Organic Matter and the Biogeochemical Impacts of the 2013 鶹ӰԺ Flood |
3:40 | Kaelin Cawley |
Characterization and spatial distribution of particulate and soluble carbon and nitrogen from wildfire impacted sediments |
4:00 | Robert Runkel |
Keynote address- Acid Mine Drainage In Colorado: A Wicked Problem With No End In Sight |
5:00 | End |
9:30 | Coffee & Muffins/Registration | |
10:00 | Kelsey Dailey |
Groundwater's role in mitigating mountain water resource impacts from a changing climate: Geochemical insights from a subalpine, headwater catchment, Colorado, USA |
10:20 | David Barnard |
Transpiration phenology along an elevational gradient in montane coniferous forests |
10:40 | Theodore Barnhart |
Streamflow Sensitivity to Changes in Snowpack Across Trans-Basin Diversions |
11:00 | Thomas Painter |
Keynote address- Entering a New Era of Water Science and Management: The Maturation of Snow Remote Sensing |
12:00 | Lunch and Panel Discussion | |
1:00 | Adam Wlostowski |
Continuous modeling of hyporheic exchange explains chemostasis in glacial meltwater streams, Antarctica |
1:20 | Timothy Clarkin |
Exploring the effects of constraints on multiobjective evolutionary algorithm optimization efficiency and effectiveness in water resources |
1:40 | Joseph Kasprzyk |
Many objective decision support for water and environmental problems under deep uncertainty |
2:00 | 20 min break | |
2:20 | Dominik Schneider |
Estimating snow depth from observations of remotely-sensed snow covered area and the terrain's snow holding capacity |
2:40 | Mark Raleigh |
Vulnerability of an operational snowmelt model to unusual snow conditions and melt drivers |
3:00 | Andrew Barrett |
How much water do glaciers and snow cover contribute to runoff from High Mountain Asia |
3:30 | Student awards and closing | |
3:45 | End |
Poster Session - Thursday, March 31, 2016, 12:00 - 12:55
- Curtis Beutler: Insights on Snow Measurement Technique and Site Area Representation at Niwot Ridge from the 2016 Snow Hydrology Internship
- Eryan Dai: L-band Soil Moisture Mapping Using Small UnManned Aerial System
- Joshua Darling: Temperature Effects On The Growth Rates Of Diatoms From Streams In The McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica
- Ursula Rick: Western Water Assessment: Innovative Research in Partnership with Decision Makers
- Sarah Evans: Effects of warming on groundwater flow in mountainous snowmelt-dominated catchments
- Harrison Gray: Modeling and observations of luminescence in river sediment from the US Mid-Atlantic Region: implications for obtaining sediment transport information
- Steven Henning: Dynamic response of watershed subsurface systems to extreme precipitation events - Implications for the 2013 Colorado Front Range Floods
- Alice Hill: Capturing hydrologic regime changes over regional scales: Lagrangian sampling and rapid hydro assessment methodologies
- Jenna Stewart: A physically based modeling framework for analyzing the effects of climate change and land-cover disturbance on suspended sediment transport in the Colorado Front Range
- Chris Williams: Data Analysis Methods for Measuring Impact of a Conservation-Focused Residential Irrigation Inspection Program
- Taylor Winchell: Early snowmelt decreases ablation period carbon uptake in a high elevation, subalpine forest, Niwot Ridge, Colorado, USA
2015
10th Annual Hydrologic Sciences Student Research Symposium
Water in Motion: The Role of an Irreplaceable Resource
April 2nd & 3rd, 2015
University Memorial Center
鶹ӰԺ
Welcome
The Hydrologic Sciences Graduate Program at the 鶹ӰԺ welcomes you to the Tenth Annual Hydrologic Sciences Research Symposium. Thank you for joining us in showcasing the diversity of ongoing hydrologic research at and around the University of Colorado. Keynote speakers Dr. Jay Famiglietti, Dr. Sally Thompson, and Dr. Andrew Fahlund will address issues at the forefront of hydrology. Talks and posters from students and invited faculty include projects on measuring and modeling snowpack and soil moisture dynamics, surface water and groundwater flow and depletion, biogeochemical processes, hydrologic engineering, and the politics that have shaped our past and dictate the future of hydrology. Join us as we celebrate hydrologic research.
2015 Keynote Speakers
- Andrew Fahlund, Deputy Director, California Water Foundation, Sacramento, CA
- Dr. James Famiglietti, Professor of Earth Systems Science, University of California, Irvine and Senior Water Scientist, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- Dr. Sally Thompson, Assistant Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of California, Berkeley
Sponsors and Donors
- Wilson Water Group
- Corona Environmental Consulting
Overview
Theme for the 2015 Symposium: Water in Motion: The role of an irreplaceable resource
The symposium consists of posters and presentations by CU-鶹ӰԺ students (graduate and undergraduate) as well as presentations by faculty and 鶹ӰԺ area researchers (ie USGS, NOAA, NCAR). In addition, there will be keynote speakers by influential members of the hydrosciences field.
The annual symposium provides a great opportunity and friendly setting for students to learn what their fellow students and researchers are doing, both within and outside their sub-discipline.
Who's Invited?
The Symposium is open to all CU-鶹ӰԺ students (grad & undergrad) and faculty working in any aspect of hydrologic sciences, especially those doing interdisciplinary research (e.g. hydrogeology, hydroecology, aquatic biology, biogeochemistry, environmental and water resource engineering, etc.). We also invite hydroscience researchers in the 鶹ӰԺ area to submit an abstract (ie, USGS, NOAA, NCAR). Submitting a poster or talk that you have already presented at another conference is fine, as long as it does not violate an agreement you made with the other conference. Making a presentation of a collaborative study for which you are not first author is fine too, as long as you made a substantial contribution and are familiar with all aspects of the study.
More information
Abstracts should be no longer than 3000 characters (about 400 words). Up to three figures may be submitted.
8:30 | Coffee & Muffins/Registration | |
9:00 | Diane McKnight |
Welcome Address |
9:15 | Jeffrey Rosen |
Developing And Deploying A Dynamically Updated Source Water Assessment And Response Tool |
9:30 | Eric Small |
Monitoring The Terrestrial Water Cycle With Reflected GPS Signals |
9:45 | Ben Livneh |
Establishing Proximal Causes Of Soil Moisture Deficits Accompanying Great Plains Drought Development |
10:00 | Eryan Dai |
L-band Soil Moisture Mapping using UAS for Validation of SMAP |
10:15 | Coffee Break | |
10:30 | Theodore Barnhart |
Sensitivity Of Hydrologic Partitioning To Snowpack Dynamics |
10:45 | Dominik Schneider |
Establishing Transferable Sub-Pixel Relationships For Estimating Snow Depth From Remotely-Sensed Snow Covered Area And A DEM |
11:00 | Jay Famiglietti |
Keynote address:How The West Was Lost |
12:00 | Lunch/Poster Session(pizza and drinks provided) | |
1:00 | Karl Rittger |
Determining Snow And Ice Melt Contributions Using MODIS And A Temperature Index Melt Model In The Hunza River Basin |
1:15 | Elizabeth Houle |
Inter-Model Diagnostics For Two Snow Models Across Multiple Western U.S. Locations And Implications For Management |
1:30 | Garret McKay |
The Effect Of Temperature On The Quantum Yield Of Photochemical Hydroxyl Radical Production From Dissolved Organic Matter |
1:45 | Aleah Sommers |
Inside The Ice: Insights From Thermo-Mechanically Coupled Modeling Of High-Elevation Regions Of The Greenland Ice Sheet |
2:00 | Sally Thompson |
Keynote address:Streams, Soils, Strategies And (Stressed Out?) Survivors - Ecohydrology In Seasonally Dry Climates |
3:00 | 15 Minute Break | |
3:15 | Roseanna Neupauer |
Effects Of Time-Varying Streambed Hydraulic Properties On Stream Depletion |
3:30 | Ellen Wohl |
The Brief, Tumultuous Life Of Logjams In Rocky Mountain National Park |
3:45 | Alia Khan |
Biogeochemical Cycling Of Black Carbon In The Taylor Valley Of The McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica |
4:00 | Scott Summers |
U.S. EPA STAR National Center For Innovation In Small Drinking Water Systems |
4:15 | Cameron Bracken |
A Spatial Bayesian Hierarchical Modeling Approach For Precipitation Extremes |
4:30 | Arista Hickman |
Water Resource Engineering In Colorado: Evolution Of A Complex South Platte Operations And Planning Model |
9:00 | Coffee & Muffins/Registration | |
9:30 | Hannah Miller |
Water/Rock Reactions In Oman Hyperalkaline Aquifers And Implications For Microbial Habitability |
9:45 | Amy Piscopo |
Optimization Of Active Spreading Strategies To Remediate Contaminated Groundwater During In Situ Chemical Oxidation |
10:00 | Jessica Ebert |
Evolution Of Dissolved Organic Matter Under A Perennially Ice Covered Lake, Antarctica |
10:15 | Coffee Break | |
10:30 | Andrew Fahlund |
Keynote address:Why Isn't Water Considered Valuable? |
11:30 | Jorge Figueroa |
Water For A Brave New World: Commonsense Solutions For The Front Range Of Colorado |
11:45 | Todd Doherty |
New Approaches For Protecting The Water-Dependent Natural Environment In 鶹ӰԺ Valley |
12:00 | Lunch, Panel Discussion, and Break | |
1:15 | Kelsey Cody |
Explaining Variability In Performance And Collective Action In Self-Governed Irrigation Systems Under Climate Change: The Case Of The San Luis Valley Of Colorado |
1:30 | Lauren Tomkinson |
The Center For Water, Earth Science And Technology (CWEST) |
1:45 | Kathleen Miller |
An Approach For Assessing The Drought-Resilience Of Colorado's Transbasin Water Diversions |
2:00 | Abigail Watson |
Incorporating Deeply Uncertain Factors Into The Many Objective Search Process: Improving Adaptation To Environmental Change |
2:15 | 15 Minute Break | |
2:30 | Student Awards and Closing | |
2:45 | End of Symposium |
Poster Session - Thursday, April 2nd, 2015, 12:00 - 12:55
- Sarah Evans: Characterization Of Groundwater Storage In The Heihe Headwater Watershed, Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, China
- Mehran Ghandehari: Density-Based Stream Network Extraction From Digital Elevation Models
- Alice Hill: Characterizing The Role And Controls Of Snowmelt In Alpine Groundwater Recharge
- Josh Jones: Examination Of Storm Cycles In A Rocky Mountain Subalpine Snowpack Using d18O Analysis And Seasonal Snow Pit Data
- Simon Mostafa: Photochemical Inactivation OfE. FaecalisIn The Presence Of Organic Matter
- Mark Raleigh: Which Forcing Data Errors Matter Most When Modeling Seasonal Snowpack?
- Carleigh Samson: Modeling the Impact of Climate Change on TOC Threshold Exceedances for Meeting DBP Regulations
- Peter Shellito: Soil Hydraulic Properties Modeled From Meter To Kilometer Scales Based On In Situ And SMOS Soil Moisture Data
- Bill Szafranski: Simulation Of Daily Flow Data Using A Stochastic Nonparametric Model (K-Nearest Neighbor)
- Matthew Weingarten: High-Rate Injection Is Associated With The Increase In U.S. Mid-Continent Seismicity
- Alana Wilson: Age And Origin Of Waters: What Hydrogen And Oxygen Isotopes In A Glacierized Catchment Can Tell Us
- Qinghuan Zhang: Hydrologic Simulations In Two Subcatchments Of The 鶹ӰԺ Creek Watershed
Sponsors
Civil, Environmental & Architectural Engineering - Geography - Geological Sciences - Environmental Studies - Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research - CU Graduate School
Many Thanks To
The planning committee: Alice Hill, Kelsey Dailey, Taylor Winchell, Nora Catolico, Mandi Hohner, Caitlin Glover, Peter Shellito, and Kaelin Cawley
Faculty Advisors: John Pitlick and Diane McKnight
Student Prizes Donated by
Wilson Water Group
Corona Environmental Consulting
Prior Schedules
To get a sense of past symposia, you can look at ourԻ
2014
9th Annual Hydrologic Sciences Student Research Symposium
Water: Our Global Solvent
April 3rd & 4th, 2014
University Memorial Center
鶹ӰԺ
2014 Keynote Speakers
- , Professor, Sierra Nevada Research Institute, University of California Merced
- , Professor, Agricultural and Resource Economics, University of Arizona
- , Assistant Professor, Geological Sciences, California State Polytechnic University
Sponsors and Donors
- 鶹ӰԺ area consulting firm,Consulting, sponsors the student awards.
- CU departments, GEOG, GEOL, ENVS, and CEAE, contributed funds to cover the costs of the symposium.
- INSTAAR and the Graduate School provide financial support for the Hydrologic Sciences Program.
Overview
Theme for the 2014 Symposium: Water: Our Global Solvent
The symposium consists of posters and presentations by CU-鶹ӰԺ students (graduate and undergraduate) as well as presentations by faculty and 鶹ӰԺ area researchers (ie USGS, NOAA, NCAR). In addition, there will be keynote speakers by influential members of the hydrosciences field.
The annual symposium provides a great opportunity and friendly setting for students to learn what their fellow students and researchers are doing, both within and outside their sub-discipline.
9:00 | Coffee & Muffins/Registration | |
9:15 | Welcome Address | |
9:30 | Jeff Writer & Sheila Murphy |
Temporal and Spatial Controls on Post-Wildfire Water Quality in the Colorado Front Range |
10:00 | Eryan Dai |
L-band Soil Moisture Mapping using UAS for Validation and Calibration of SMAP |
10:15 | Amy Piscopo |
Multi-Objective Optimization of Engineered Injection and Extraction to Enhance In Situ Remediation of Contaminated Groundwater |
10:30 | Joe Ryan |
Fate and Transport of Hydraulic Fracturing Fluid Organic Compounds |
10:45 | 15 Minute Break | |
11:00 | Stephen Osborn |
Keynote Address:Water Quality and Natural Gas Production: A Tale of Two Shales |
12:00 | Lunch/Poster Session(Free pizza and Drinks) | |
1:15 | John Knowles |
The Relative Contributions of Alpine and Subalpine Ecosystems to the Water Balance of a Headwater Catchment |
1:30 | Margaret Burns |
Variability of Hillslope Dissolved Organic Matter Transport and Transformation in a Semi-arid Catchment |
1:45 | Hallie Adams |
Linking Topography, Hydrology, Climate, and Ecology in Semiarid Forests: Within Catchment Annual Tree Growth and Water Use Efficiency |
2:00 | Erin Berryman |
Terrain Modulates Hydrological Couplings with Soil Respiration within the 鶹ӰԺ Creek Drainage |
2:15 | 15 Minute Break | |
2:30 | Cameron Bracken |
Seasonal Variability of Western US Extreme Precipitation |
2:45 | Robert Brakenridge |
Satellite Measurements of River Discharge and Runoff |
3:00 | Martyn Clark |
Science to support water resource planning and management: Understanding sensitivity to climate change and improving hydroclimatic monitoring and prediction products |
3:15 | 15 Minute Break | |
3:30 | Kelsey Cody |
Emergence of Collective Action in a Groundwater Commons: Irrigators in the San Luis Valley of Colorado |
3:45 | Douglas Kenney |
Empowering Municipal Water Utilities to Pursue Aggressive Conservation Programs |
4:00 | Ken Neubecker |
A 21st Century paradigm for rivers and water in the West: adding ethics and biology to an engineering solution |
4:15 | Yilma Seleshi |
Nile Hydrology and Ethiopian Dams, Great Ethiopian Renaissance Dam as a case study |
4:30 | End of Day |
8:30 | Coffee & Muffins/Registration | |
9:00 | Hari Rajaram |
Enlargement of Englacial Conduits in Cold Ice - Verification of Basic Theory Against Simple Experiments, and Some New Insights |
9:15 | Aleah Sommers |
Temperature and Velocity Profiles Inferred By Thermal Flowline Modeling for High Elevation Regions of the Greenland Ice Sheet |
9:30 | Adrian Harpold |
Evaluating the Importance of Snowmelt Infiltration to Soil Water Availability Across Western U.S. Mountain Ecosystems |
9:45 | Ryan Utz |
The National Ecological Observatory Network: An Update on Construction Progress and Introduction to the STReams Experimental Observatory Network (STREON) |
10:00 | Alana Wilson |
Using hydrochemistry data to constrain the role of snow and ice meltwater in the hydrology of Langtang Valley, Nepal |
10:15 | Jim Prairie |
Facilitating water supply and demand planning efforts in the Colorado River Basin |
10:30 | Eric Gordon |
Making Science Relevant: How Hydroclimate Research Gets Integrated Into Decision Making |
10:45 | John Carron |
Hydros Consulting Inc., Background and Operation |
10:50 | 10 minute break | |
11:00 | Rogers Bales |
Keynote Address:Mountain Hydrology, Forest Management and Water Security in the Sierra Nevada |
12:00 | Lunch Round Table(Free sandwiches and Drinks) | |
1:00 | 15 minute break | |
1:15 | Bonnie Colby |
Keynote Address:“Drought-Proofing†Regional Water Supplies - How Effective Can We Be? |
2:15 | Andrea Sack |
An isotopic perspective on water and carbon sources in complex geochemical setting of the Appalachians |
2:30 | 15 minute break | |
2:45 | Emily Graham |
The Role of Dissolved Organic Matter in Mercury Methylation in the Duluth-Superior Port |
3:00 | Julie Korak |
Fluorescence Spectroscopy As An Indicator For Cyanobacteria Organic Matter Release By Oxidation Processes/td> |
3:15 | Hannah Miller |
Low temperature H2 production and habitability of serpentine aquifers |
3:30 | Farrokh Shoaei |
The Importance Of Instantaneous Flow Structures to Total Mixing And Reaction Of Gamete Filaments In Broadcast Spawning |
3:45 | Student Awards and Closing | |
4:15 | End of Symposium Start of Happy Hour |
Poster Session - Thursday, April 3rd, 2014, 12:00 - 1:15p
- HenryBrandes: Evaluating the effects of precipitation and wind speed on snow water equivalence along an elevation gradient using 30 years of LTER snow-pit data
- BenjaminCastellani: Comparing the Annual Pattern of Snowfall and Accumulation at Summit, Greenland
- ClaraChew: Surface soil moisture estimations using GPS-Interferometric Reflectometry: error sources and sensing limits
- StevenCrisp: Quantifying long-term geomorphological change in Dry Valley streams: integrating survey data with subsequent LiDAR surveys
- RachelGabor: More than just the sum of the catchment: In-stream processing of water-soluble soil organic matter
- AmandaHohner: Assessing wildfire impacted source water quality and treatability in the Cache la Poudre watershed through monitoring and a lab-based leaching study
- JohnMeyer: Characterizing fire impacted dissolved organic matter (DOM) before and after coagulation treatment
- BrettPoulin: Mercury transformation and release dynamics under saturation conditions in contaminated riparian soils
- MarkRaleigh: Spatial and interannual variability of snow interception in coniferous forest canopies
- GarrettRue: Increasing ARD and rare earth metal concentrations in an alpine watershed
- DominikSchneider: Combining remotely-sensed snow water equivalent with in-situ measurements to produce a real-time SWE product
- BrookeStamper: Drier Soils in a Warming World? Examining the Relationship Between Soil-Water Stress and Snow Persistence in the Mountain West
Sponsors
Civil, Environmental & Architectural Engineering • Geography • Geological Sciences • Environmental Studies • Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research • CU Graduate School
Many Thanks to:
The planning committee: Jessica Dehart, Daniel Broman, Ben Livneh, Christopher Florian, Kaelin Cawley, Theodore Barnhart, Garrett Rue, and Elizabeth Koebele for organizing the symposium. Faculty Advisors: John Pitlick and Diane McKnight for advising.
Students Prizes Donated by:
AMEC Earth & Environmental is AMEC’s full-service engineering, environmental, and construction management division. AMEC’s Colorado offices have provided quality water resources management services throughout the state of Colorado since 1983. Our Colorado offices are staffed with civil/drainage/water resources engineers, water system and hydrologic modelers, geoscientists, environmental scientists, planners, and GIS and CAD specialists. These specialists form multi-disciplinary teams to unlock value for our clients. Our success is built upon maintaining the “best in industry staffâ€, providing technical innovation, and delivery of cost effective solutions.
2013
Welcome
The Hydrologic Sciences Graduate Program at the University of Colorado at 鶹ӰԺ welcomes you to the Eighth Annual Hydrologic Sciences Student Research Symposium. Thank you for joining us in showcasing the diversity of ongoing hydrologic research at the University of Colorado. Keynote speakers Dr. Dennis Lettenmaier, Dr. Patty Limerick and Dr. Patrick Belmont will address issues at the forefront of hydrology. Talks and posters from students and invited faculty include projects on the role of water in geologic and biogeochemical processes, ecosystems functions, decision-making, and global elemental cycling. Join us as we celebrate the future of hydrologic research.
Keynote Speakers:
11am Monday
Dr. Dennis Lettenmaier: Professor, Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Washington-Seattle
4pm Monday March 18th
Dr. Patty Limerick: Faculty Director and Chair of the Board, Center of the American West, Professor of History, University of Colorado-鶹ӰԺ
2:30pm Tuesday March 19th
Dr. Patrick Belmont, Assisstant Professor, Watershed Sciences, Utah State University
10:30 | Coffee & Muffins/Registration | |
10:45 | Welcome Address | |
11:00 -12:00 | Dennis Lettenmaier* |
Climate change and the water resources of the western U.S. |
12:00 - 1:45 | Lunch/Poster Session (Free Pizza and Drinks) | |
1:45-2:00 | Sabre Duren |
Wetland Photochemistry as a Major Control on the Transport of Metals in an Acid Mine Drainage Impacted Watershed |
2:00-2:15 | Jessica Ebert |
Modeling Microbial Contributions to Dissolved Organic Matter Using Parallel Factor Analysis |
2:15-2:30 | Tyler Kohler |
Hydrologic controls on microbial mat communities in the McMurdo Dry Valley streams of Antarctica |
15 minute break | ||
2:45 - 3:00 | Stephanie Higgins |
Land subsidence at aquaculture facilities in the Yellow River Delta, China |
3:00 - 3:15 | Keli Goodman |
The Aquatic Program at the National Ecological Observatory Network (NEON) |
15 minute break | ||
3:30 - 4:00 | Justice Gregory Hobbs |
Into the Grand, the Four Corners of History, Poetry, The Law and Judging |
4:00-5:00 | Patty Limerick* |
A Ditch in Time: The City, the West, and Water |
6:00 Dinner at Diane McKnight's house |
9:00 | Coffee & Muffins/Registration | |
9:15 - 9:30 | Pablo Mendoza |
Towards a better understanding of hydrologic sensitivity to climate change: impact of hydrologic model choices |
9:30 - 9:45 | Naoki Mizukami |
Impact of Different Large-scale Hydrologic Model Forcing Data on Hydrologic Simulations over Mountainous Regions |
9:45 - 10:00 | Leif Anderson |
The effects of interannual climate variability on paleoclimate estimates derived from glacial moraines |
15 minute break | ||
10:00 - 10:15 | Darren Larsen |
Asynchronous Little Ice Age Glacier Fluctuations in Iceland and Europe linked to subpolar North Atlantic circulation |
10:30- 10:45 | Brian Macpherson |
Enthalpy-Based Models for Ice Sheets and Improving Understanding of Cryo-Hydrologic Warming |
10:45 - 11:00 | Benjamin Hudson |
Estimating Freshwater Discharge from the Greenland Ice Sheet with MODIS |
15 minute break | ||
11:15-11:30 | Laura Snider |
What is Newsworthy in Scientific Research? Perspectives from the CU Communications Office |
11:30-12:00 | Tom Yulsman |
Running Dry: Water and Journalism Both? |
12:00 - 1:00 | Lunch Round Table (Free sandwiches and Drinks) | |
1:00 -1:15 | Amy Piscopo |
Many-Objective Design of Engineered Injection and Extraction Sequences to Optimize In Situ Remediation of Contaminated Groundwater |
1:15 - 1:30 | Gregory Lackey |
Varying Stream Channel Conductance and its Effects on Stream Depletion Estimations |
1:30 - 1:45 | Warangkana Larbkich |
Introduction Of Solute Age To Assess Aquifer Vulnerability And Direct Simulation Of Mean Groundwater Age |
10 minute break | ||
1:55 - 2:10 | Jessica Dehart |
Fate and Transport of 8 Hydraulic Fracturing Fluid Organic Compounds |
2:10 - 2:25 | Michael Fitch |
Hydraulic Fracturing Water Usage: Activist Perceptions and the Controversial Technique |
5 minute break | ||
2:30 - 3:30 | Patrick Belmont* |
Landscape Erosion and Sediment Routing Under Non-stationary Hydrologic Conditions |
3:30 | Student Prizes Awarded | |
4:00 Happy Hour for students and invited speakers(At the Med) |
Posters
- DanielBroman: Climatic Variability of the West African Monsoon and its Influence on Meningococcal Meningitis Susceptibility
- LoganCallihan: Robust Decision Strategies for Climate Change Assessment
- KelseyCody: Climate Change, Growth, and Regional Integration: Lessons for Municipal and Industrial Water Providers
- Lianne Daugherty: Application of Stochastic Weather Generator based Seasonal Ensemble Streamflow Forecasts to Water Resources Management
- BrianEbel: Wildfire and hillslope aspect impacts on subsurface hydrologic response
- Solomon Erkyihun: Modeling Large Scale Climate Indicators Using Wavelet-based Time Series Method
- Sarah Evans: Sensing Vegetation Growth and Senescence with Reflected GPS Signals
- ShahenHuda: Modeling the Effects of Bed Topography on Fluvial Erosion by Saltating Bed Load
- Roseanna Neupauer: An Adjoint Approach to Estimating Stream Depletion
- Nadine Reitman: 3D modeling of groundwater flow and solute transport in a watershed underlain by salt deposits in southeast Utah
- DominikSchneider: A regression-based approach for blending remotely sensed and in-situ snow water equivalent estimates in the Colorado River Basin
- RobertSemborski: Small Scale Spatial Variations Within the Snowpack on Niwot Ridge Long Term Ecological Research Site
- EliTownsend: Correlating the spectroscopic properties of organic matter to the photochemical formation of hydroxyl radical in natural waters
- JuliaTraylor: Optimal Initial Configuration of Treatment Solution for In Situ Remediation with Engineered Injection and Extraction in Homogeneous and Heterogeneous Aquifers
- YantoYanto: Investigating ENSO Signal in Ciliwung Streamflow Variability, Jakarta, Indonesia
Sponsors
Civil, Environmental & Architectural Engineering • Geography • Geological Sciences • Environmental Studies • Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research • CU Graduate School
Many thanks to:
The planning committee:Sara Tabatabaie, Bill Szafranski, Ben Livneh, Katya Hafich, Kaelin Cawley, Rebecca Smith, Abby Kuranz, Rachel Gabor, Logan Callihan, Brian Buma, and Andy Wickert for organizing the symposium.
Faculty Advisors:John Pitlick, and Diane McKnight for advising.
Student Prizes Donated by:
AMEC Earth & Environmentalis AMEC’s full-service engineering, environmental, and construction management division. AMEC’s Colorado offices have provided quality water resources management services throughout the state of Colorado since 1983. Our Colorado offices are staffed with civil/drainage/water resources engineers, water system and hydrologic modelers, geoscientists, environmental scientists, planners, and GIS and CAD specialists. These specialists form multi-disciplinary teams to unlock value for our clients. Our success is built upon maintaining the “best in industry staffâ€, providing technical innovation, and delivery of cost effective solutions.
2012
2012 Keynote Speakers
- , Senior Research Hydrologist at U.S. Geological Survey (USGS)
- , Assistant Professor Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Iowa
- , Professor of Zoology and Center for Limnology, University of Wisconsin
2011
Summary Schedule 2011
Thursday, March 31 (UMC Aspen Rooms, 2nd floor)
10:30 Welcome/Registration