Friday, October 29, 2010

HWRSA 2011 Calendar!

Get your brand new HWRSA calendar.

The HWR department calendars are ready to be ordered and printed!
Now you can have a look at the photos and designs and order as many calendars as you wish - be it for yourself or to give away. All the pictures were taken by our own HWR folks, so this calendar is really something special. And keep in mind, the profits go directly to the rather empty bank account of the HWR Student Association (SUDS, anyone?).
You have two options:
1. Desktop Calendar (4'' x 8''), $8 apiece
2. Wall Calendar (11'' x 8.5''), $12 apiece
Email Ingo Heidbuchel, ingohei@hwr.arizona.edu to order your calendar. If you pick up in person no extra charge if you want the calendar mailed to you it will cost $6 Shipping and Handling (USPS-prioirty - contact if overseas and Ingo will figure something out with you).









































Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Andrew Binley October 27th Seminar

Dr. Andrew Binley ~ Lancaster University, Environmental Science

“Hydrogeophysics: Opportunities and Challenges”

Wednesday, October 27, 2010, 4:00 pm

Harshbarger Building ~ Room 206

Detailed knowledge on the extent, hydraulic properties, and vulnerability of groundwater reservoirs is necessary to enable sustainable use of groundwater resources. Hydrogeophysical methods can allow, for example, large scale aquifer characterisation, previously unobtainable through conventional hydrogeological techniques. In addition, time-lapse deployment of appropriate methods can give useful insight into complex subsurface processes, aiding hydrological model development and the assessment of groundwater restoration strategies. New regulatory water policies, for example the European Water Framework Directive, demonstrates the demand for new technology to assist in water resource management, with clear opportunities for hydrogeophysical method development and application. Geophysical methods have been widely used to support groundwater investigations for many years. Geophysical borehole logging is commonly used within hydrogeological studies to provide data to support the development of conceptual models of groundwater processes. Much of these established methods, however, offer only qualitative information about hydrogeological parameters and processes and during the 1990s a re-emergence of geophysics in hydrology occurred as attempts were made to provide more quantitative information about subsurface hydrology. The field hydrogeophysics emerged as a multi-disciplinary subject that focuses on the use of geophysical methods for characterising subsurface features, determining hydrogeological properties and monitoring processes relevant to soil and groundwater processes. Over the past decade hydrogeophysics emerged due to the availability of new (or developing) geophysical techniques and the potential value in addressing the hydrological challenges that had emerged from recent research. Many geophysical methods may provide solutions to the problems above but it is essential that the expectations of the hydrologist are consistent with what the geophysicist can provide. Geophysical methods will be limited in what they can offer but provided these limitations are accepted at the outset then there may be enormous potential value to a hydrological study. Imaging of hydrological structure and processes are potentially valuable hydrogeophysical tools, however, in hydrological investigations one is often faced with subtle contrasts in some geophysical property. In such cases the application of conventional geophysical inversion approaches may have limited value due to limited resolution and effects of inappropriate regularisation schemes. In addition, there is a need to link the imaged geophysical property to some useful hydrological variable or parameter. This requires reliable petrophysical models, developed at an appropriate scale. The resulting image will be subject to uncertainty, the extent of which should be understood before any hydrological value can be drawn from the image. Recent attempts have been made to tackle some of these problems. Here we outline the limitations of current hydrogeophysical methods, identify specific challenges facing the community and exciting opportunities in this field.

Shlomo Neuman Oral HIstory Interview

Shlomo Peter Neuman is professor at the University of Arizona in Tucson. He is considered to be one of the scientists who changed the face of hydrogeology during the 20th century. In this series of 4 videos he is interviewed by Jesus Carrera, Alberto Guadagnini and Daniel Tartakovski. The interview covers some aspects of his life, his early work on well hydraulics as well as many aspects
of his research on aquifer characterization, inverse modeling, fractured media, stochastic methods, or multiscale analysis. To see this and other videos, just follow the link: http://timecapsule.ecodev.ch/

Friday, October 22, 2010

Peter Troch Honored with Dalton Award from EGU

Please join me in congratulating our colleague, Dr. Peter Troch, recipient of the 2011 John Dalton Medal. This medal was established by the Division on Hydrological Sciences in recognition of the scientific achievements of John Dalton. Other prestigious award recipients can been viewed at http://www.egu.eu/egs/award6i.htm. It will be awarded by the European Geosciences Union for distinguished research in Hydrology reviewed as an Earth science.