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----- Forwarded Message -----
From: "Yusong Rogers" <[email protected]> 
To: "efmh seminar" <[email protected]>, 
[email protected], [email protected] 
Sent: Wednesday, May 18, 2011 8:43:31 AM 
Subject: EFMH Spring 2011 Seminar Series, 5/23, 12:15pm, Y2E2 111: “Climate 
Change and Subsurface Storage” 



************** EFMH Spring 2011 Seminar Series ************** 

Date: Monday, May 23, 2011 
Time: 12:15pm-1:15pm 
Location: Y2E2 111 

Guest speaker: Professor Graham Fogg 
Department of Land, Air and Water Resources, University of California, Davis 

Title: Climate Change and Subsurface Storage 

Abstract: 

Adaptation to climate change, groundwater quantity, and groundwater quality 
sustainability are interlinked in the Central Valley of California. The 
adaptation can be partly accomplished with strategically located subsurface 
storage and recovery operations designed to capitalize on the complex but 
heretofore largely uncharacterized subsurface geologic architecture, wherein 
only 20 to 50 percent of system volume can be considered aquifer yet the 
available volume for water storage easily exceeds the combined capacity of 
California’s four largest reservoirs. The source of water for this recharge 
could come from excess winter flows as the runoff timing continues to shift 
toward winter months and away from the spring and summer months. The mechanisms 
for recharging this water sufficiently and rapidly need to be part of a growing 
area of research that includes new methods of managing both the floodplains and 
the vadose zone. The recharge could strongly affect sustainability of both 
groundwater quantity and quality. Currently groundwater quantity suffers from 
overdraft in many areas of the Valley and the recharge would obviously help. 
Further, groundwater quality is likely nonsustainable as long as the dominant 
source of recharge remains irrigation water, which includes salinity and other 
contaminants. Groundwater quality could benefit or not, depending on whether 
the enhanced winter recharge water is less contaminated than the current 
irrigation sources. Determination of the subsurface geologic architecture, 
methods for strategic recharge and its role in solving California’s water 
storage problem as well as groundwater sustainability should be part of a 
priority research agenda for the future. Integrated hydrologic modeling of 
groundwater recharge and recovery schemes in the Cosumnes River watershed 
beneath the Central Valley floor provides insight into how subsurface storage 
can mitigate loss of snow storage in the Sierra Nevada Mountains. 

************************************** 

Below is a link to the sign up sheet for individual meetings with our speaker. 
There is a link in the document that guides you to the details of the talk 
given by Professor Graham Fogg on May 23. Please sign up to meet with Prof. 
Fogg if you are interested. 

https://docs.google.com/document/d/1OV9Bgih8Uercqewg-G70CaawQBWwM4PawN-iSKii6aE/edit?hl=en&authkey=CIPgo5QL
 





~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~. 


Ms. Yusong Rogers 
Administrative Associate 

Environmental Fluid Mechanics & Hydrology Program 
Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering 
Stanford University 

Y2E2, Room 126 
m/c 4020 
473 Via Ortega 
Stanford, CA 94305 

Tel: 650 723-4372 
Fax: 650 725-9720 


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