Abstract

In mountain headwater streams the quality and resilience of cold-water habitat is regulated by surface stream channel connectivity and groundwater exchange. These critical hydrologic processes are thought to be influenced by the stream corridor bedrock contact depth (sediment thickness), which is often inferred from sparse hillslope borehole information, piezometer refusal, and remotely sensed data. To investigate how local bedrock depth might control summer stream temperature and channel disconnection (dewatering) patterns, we measured stream corridor bedrock depth by collecting and interpreting 191 passive seismic datasets along eight headwater streams in Shenandoah National Park (Virginia USA). In addition, we used multiyear stream temperature and streamflow records to calculate summer baseflow metrics along and among the study streams. Finally, comprehensive visual surveys of stream channel dewatering were conducted in 2016, 2019, and 2021 during summer baseflow conditions (124 total km of stream length). We found that measured bedrock depths were not well-characterized by soils maps or an existing global-scale geologic dataset, where the latter overpredicted measured depths by 12.2 m (mean), or approximately four times the average bedrock depth of 2.9 m. Half of the eight study stream corridors had an average bedrock depth of less than 2 m. Of the eight study streams, Staunton River had the deepest average bedrock depth (3.4 m), the coldest summer temperature profiles, and substantially higher summer baseflow indices compared to the other study steams. Staunton River also exhibited paired air and water annual temperature signals suggesting deeper groundwater influence, and the stream channel did not dewater in lower sections during any baseflow survey. In contrast, streams Paine Run and Piney River did show pronounced, patchy channel dewatering, with Paine Run having dozens of discrete dry channel sections ranging 1 to greater than 300 m in length. Stream dewatering patterns were apparently influenced by a combination of discrete deep bedrock (20 m+) features and more subtle sediment thickness variation (1–4 m), depending on local stream valley hydrogeology. In combination these unique datasets show the first large-scale empirical support for existing conceptual models of headwater stream disconnection based on underflow capacity and shallow groundwater supply.

Highlights

  • Mountain headwater stream habitat is influenced by hydrologic connectivity along the surface channel, and connectivity between the channel and multiscale groundwater flowpaths (Covino, 2017; Wohl, 2017)

  • We extended the existing mountain headwater bedrock depth surveys from Shenandoah National Park (SNP), Virginia, USA to seven additional subwatersheds and compared results to physical mapping of stream dewatering, multi-year stream temperature data and derived groundwater influence metrics, and baseflow separation analysis to address the following research questions: 1. Does stream corridor bedrock depth exhibit longitudinal spatial structure in mountainous streams? Can measured bedrock depth dynamics be accurately extracted from existing largescale datasets or inferred from high resolution soils maps?

  • Seminal groundwater/surface water exchange research has indicated that bedrock topography along headwater streams may be a first-order control on the arrangement of nested gaining and losing flowpaths (e.g. Tonina & Buffington, 2009), and increased bedrock depth is recognized as a primary driver of stream disconnection during dry periods that could be exacerbated by climate change (Ward et al 2020)

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Summary

Introduction

Mountain headwater stream habitat is influenced by hydrologic connectivity along the surface channel, and connectivity between the channel and multiscale groundwater flowpaths (Covino, 2017; Wohl, 2017). In headwater stream valleys characterized by irregular bedrock topography and thin, permeable sediments, nested physical processes interact to control the connectivity of groundwater/surface water exchange (Tonina and Buffington, 2009). Between stormflow and snowmelt events, headwater streamflow (baseflow) is primarily generated by groundwater discharge due to a relative lack of soil water storage and release (Winter et al, 1998). Deeper groundwater may represent an important contribution to summer streamflow in systems with relatively permeable bedrock (Burns et al, 1998; O’Sullivan et al, 2020), shallow, low permeability bedrock generally restricts stream-groundwater connectivity to the thin layers of unconsolidated sediments (Briggs et al, 2018b)

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