Potential for surface gas flux measurements in exploration and surface evaluation of geothermal resources

2002 ◽  
Vol 43 (2) ◽  
pp. 121-122
Geothermics ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 29 (6) ◽  
pp. 637-670 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ronald W Klusman ◽  
Joseph N Moore ◽  
Michael P LeRoy

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ko van Huissteden ◽  
Kanayim Teshebaeva ◽  
Yuki Cheung ◽  
Hein Noorbergen ◽  
Mark van Persie

<p>Permafrost-affected river plains are highly diverse in discharge regime, floodplain morphology, channel forms, channel mobility and ecosystems. Frozen floodplains range from almost barren systems with high channel mobility, to extensive wetland areas with low channel mobility, abundant abandoned channels, back-swamps and shallow floodplain lakes. Floodplain processes are increasingly affected by climate-induced changes in river discharge and temperature regime: changes in the dates of freeze-up, break-up and spring floods, and changes in the discharge distribution throughout the year.</p><p>In permafrost floodplains, changes in flooding frequency, flood height and water temperature affect active layer thickness, subsidence and erosion processes. Data from the Northeast Siberian Berelegh river floodplain (a tributary to the Indigirka river) demonstrate that increasing spring flood height potentially causes permafrost thaw, soil subsidence and increase of the floodplain area. INSAR (interferometric synthetic aperture radar) data indicate that poorly drained areas in this region are affected by soil subsidence. Morphological evidence for subsidence of the river floodplain is abundant, and river-connected lakes show expansion features also seen in thaw lakes.</p><p>These floodplain wetland ecosystems are also affected by changes in the discharge regime and permafrost. On the one hand, floodplains are sites of active sedimentation of organic matter-rich sediments and sequestration of carbon. This carbon is derived from upstream erosion of permafrost and vegetation, and from autochthonous primary production. Nutrient supply by flood waters supports highly productive ecosystems with a comparatively large biomass.</p><p>On the other hand, these ecosystems also emit high amounts of CH<sub>4</sub>, which may be affected by flooding regime. In the example presented here, the CH<sub>4 </sub>emission from floodplain wetlands is about seven times higher that the emission from similar tundra wetlands outside the floodplain.</p><p>The dynamic nature of floodplains hinders carbon and greenhouse gas flux measurements. Better quantification of greenhouse gas fluxes from these floodplains, and their relation with river regime changes, is highly important to understand future emissions from thawing permafrost. Given the difficulties of surface greenhouse gas flux measurements, recent remote sensing material could play an important role here.</p>


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew Kowalski ◽  
Gerardo Fratini ◽  
Gabriela Miranda ◽  
Penélope Serrano-Ortiz ◽  
George Burba

<p>Arithmetic averaging procedures are traditionally used in many applications in the field of micrometeorology, but these neglect Osborne Reynolds's specification of turbulence, and thus, strictly speaking, violate the momentum conservation law. Recently, it has been shown  that applying linear momentum conservation to surface exchanges defines an average motion in the surface-normal direction (i.e., a Stefan flow), and thereby describes a non-diffusive transport that is distinct from turbulent transport. Here we examine data from a nearly ideal micrometeorological field site (extensive, flat, and mono specific-reed wetland) to show that traditional flux-tower calculations, including but not limited to the Webb corrections,  generally provide an inadequate approximation of turbulent  fluxes and yet still adequately characterize the net fluxes in most traditional cases. The importance of such conflation of diffusive and non-diffusive transport is greatest for situations with relatively large non-diffusive fluxes, as occurs during particular times of day in general and particularly when considering fluxes in the stream-wise direction. An examination of fluxes calculated using the traditional arithmetic averaging procedure, versus the proposed, more theoretically appropriate calculations that fully obey conservation law, illustrates important implications for the characterization of gas-exchange processes and more generally the discipline of micrometeorology. These implications may become particularly critical in near future as gas flux measurements enter an era of automated operation on massive network scales, including automated gas flux calculations. At the same time, such measurements strive to adequately represent gas exchange of newer species with extremely low fluxes (vs traditionally measured larger fluxes of H2O and CO2). Multiple assumptions, and neglected terms and processes historically deployed for evaluating larger fluxes, may no longer work well when much smaller fluxes are considered, especially when measured by a non-expert using a fully automated flux station. These no-longer-negligible aspects include fundamentals of adequately handling the diffusive and non-diffusive transport mechanisms addressed in this presentation.</p>


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