Hydrogeology Journal was founded in 1992 to foster understanding of hydrogeology; to describe worldwide progress in hydrogeology; and to provide an accessible forum for scientists, researchers, engineers, and practitioners in developing and industrialized countries. Since then, the journal has earned a large worldwide readership. Its peer-reviewed research articles integrate subsurface hydrology and geology with supporting disciplines, such as: geochemistry, geophysics, geomorphology, geobiology, surface-water hydrology, tectonics, numerical modeling, economics, and sociology. Articles explore theoretical and applied aspects of hydrogeologic science, including studies ranging from local areas and short time periods to global problems and geologic time; innovative instrumentation; water-resource and mineral-resource evaluations; and overviews of hydrogeologic systems of interest in various regions. Special issues, recent topical collections, Editors’ Choice articles and more information can be accessed on this Springer website. Past topical collections are listed on the IAH website at: https://iah.org To submit your article, please visit: https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/hydrogeology
Hydrogeology Journal
Description
Identifiers
ISSN | 1431-2174 |
e-ISSN | 1435-0157 |
DOI | 10.1007/10040.1435-0157 |
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Additional information
Data set: Springer
Articles
Hydrogeology Journal > 2019 > 27 > 7 > 2535-2550
The identification of transient groundwater contaminant sources in terms of source locations, contaminant magnitudes, and active durations remains a challenge. The problem becomes more complex due to spatial heterogeneity, sparse observation data, concentration measurement errors, and unexpected uncertainty. This study addresses this challenge by proposing a modified self-organizing maps (SOM) algorithm;...
Hydrogeology Journal > 2019 > 27 > 7 > 2347-2363
In karst aquifers, groundwater flow is often turbulent and occurs in variably saturated conduits. This implies a nonlinear response to recharge events which cannot be reproduced with the tools commonly used for groundwater flow modeling. Recent studies have shown the usefulness of using conduit flow models to simulate flow in karst systems. However existing models are built on abstract representations...
Hydrogeology Journal > 2019 > 27 > 7 > 2551-2561
Groundwater vulnerability assessment is an effective tool for groundwater pollution prevention and control. However, very few methods are available to address the vulnerability assessment of confined aquifers, though the risk of confined aquifer pollution has been increasing. This paper describes a method that integrates the vulnerability of the unconfined aquifer (V), extraction rate (E), aquitard...