Conference Proceedings and Events
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Colorado State University hosts conferences and events from all disciplines across campus. These digital collections include materials presented at various conferences and events held at CSU.
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Item Open Access Beef Industry(Colorado State University. Libraries, 1974-03-20) DonItem Open Access Twentieth annual AGU hydrology days: conference program and abstracts(Colorado State University. Libraries, 2000) American Geophysical Union, author; Colorado State University, author; Colorado State University, publisherTo access abstracts, please see: http://hydrologydays.colostate.edu/program.htm.Item Open Access Hydrology days 2001: conference program(Colorado State University. Libraries, 2001) American Geophysical Union, author; Colorado State University, author; Colorado State University, publisherThe 21st annual AGU hydrology days was held in the Cherokee Park Room, Lory Student Center, Colorado State University on April 2-5, 2001. To access abstracts, please see: http://hydrologydays.colostate.edu/schedule_01.htm.Item Open Access Conference program: AGU hydrology days 2002(Colorado State University. Libraries, 2002) American Geophysical Union, author; Colorado State University, author; Colorado State University, publisherTwenty-second annual AGU hydrology days was held in the Cherokee Park Room, Lory Student Center, Colorado State University on April 1-4, 2002. To access abstracts, please see: http://hydrologydays.colostate.edu/schedule_02.htm.Item Open Access Cellular automata models of particle interactions in sediment entrainment(Colorado State University. Libraries, 2003) Brown, Nancy E., author; RamÃrez, Jorge A., author; Whol, Ellen E., author; Colorado State University, publisherThe geometry of a river bed surface is determined by the arrangement and size of the particles that form the bed. In gravel-to-boulder bed rivers, the surface geometry around any individual particle may be complex and highly variable, and tends to include multi-particle structures. These textural and structural characteristics influence whether an individual particle is entrained. The effect on entrainment is generally described as particle hiding and protrusion, which together define the degree to which an individual particle is sheltered by surrounding particles. Two variants of a cellular automata (CA) model are used here to investigate the effect of controls on sediment entrainment resulting from particle sheltering. One model variant uses the degree of sheltering as a threshold constraint; the other variant uses the degree of sheltering as an extremal condition. There is a striking contrast in the spatial pattern of particle sizes that result with these different entrainment rules. The extremal rule results in a patchy distribution of particles sizes, in which groups of adjacent cells tend to have the same particle size. The effect of the extremal rule is roughly analogous to considering a sequence of flow events that progressively increase the overall stability of particles on the channel bed, so that over time successively higher flows are required to mobilize particles. In contrast, the threshold rule results in a channel bed that tends to coarsen with time.Item Open Access Evolutionary neural network modeling for describing rainfall-runoff process(Colorado State University. Libraries, 2003) Nazemi, Alireza, author; Poorkhadem N., Hossein, author; Akbarzadeh, T., author; Mohammad, R., author; Hosseini, Seyed Mahmood, author; Colorado State University, publisherSince the last decade, several studies have shown the ability of Artificial Neural Networks (ANNs) in modeling of rainfall-runoff process. From methodological viewpoint, ANN belongs to more general paradigm, i.e., soft computing or computational intelligence, in which independent methodologies, mostly Fuzzy Logic (FL), ANN, and Genetic Algorithms (GAs), are combined together in order to provide an intelligent behavior in computational frameworks. Consequently, in the context of rainfall-runoff modeling, this question rises whether hybridization of ANNs with other soft computing-related methodologies improves the overall performance of modeling or not. In this study, based on the idea of structure and/or parameter identification of ANNs with GAs, the evolutionary neural networks modeling paradigm is examined for describing the rainfall-runoff process. One of the benchmark data set of current literature, i.e., Leaf River basin (near Collins, Mississippi) data set, is used for simulation. The results show that on the one hand, the overall accuracy is improved; but one the other hand, in evolutionary neural modeling, the computational time is increased significantly. Hence the modeler may be faced with a trade-off problem between accuracy and computational difficulties which may have different importance in a particular rainfall-runoff problem.Item Open Access Parameter estimation technique for a water balance model and application to measured data(Colorado State University. Libraries, 2003) Toninelli, V., author; Salvucci, D. G., author; Mancini, M., author; Colorado State University, publisherA new method has been developed to estimate the parameters of a water balance model's components (actual evapotranspiration, drainage plus runoff) as functions of the soil moisture and of the estimated parameters. The technique requires limited information, that is measured precipitation and soil moisture plus potential evapotranspiration; in particular, the method needs only an index of the soil moisture content, becoming easy to be applied to remotely sensed measures of soil moisture. The method's skills are evaluated using long series of synthetic data, both at point and hillslope scales, and series of data measured for shorter periods.Item Open Access Habitat improvement techniques for aquatic fishery: application experiences at Ta-Chia River in Taiwan(Colorado State University. Libraries, 2003) Lin, Bing-Shyan, author; Yeh, Chao-Hsien, author; Lien, Hui-Pang, author; Tuan, Ching-Hao, author; Colorado State University, publisherWith characteristics of river continuum, stream ecosystems have diverse components and environments from upstream channel to estuarine area. Therefore, the habitat requirements and composition of conservative object should be well understood before applying any improvement measure. In this paper, the causes of stream habitat changes were first illustrated with the categories and principles of habitat restoration methods. The structural restoration techniques of fish habitat improvement, including dam partial-removal, utilized by the authors for two research projects during last dozen years were then presented. Through the introductions on the project background, planning guidelines, structure design, and ecological evaluation, this paper tried to provide some effective examples of ecological engineering that ecological experts were invited for cooperation and advising.Item Open Access Aggregation scenarios to model water fluxes in watersheds with spatial changes in soil texture(Colorado State University. Libraries, 2003) Soria, Jose M., author; Leij, Feike J., author; Angulo-Jaramillo, Rafael, author; Fuentes, Carlos, author; Haverkamp, Randel, author; Parlange, J.-Yves, author; Colorado State University, publisherAccurate knowledge of water fluxes in the vadose zone of watersheds is important for applications such as water resources management and climate forecasting. Most, if not all, largescale studies follow a pragmatic approach where simplifying assumptions have to be made regarding problem formulation and estimation of hydraulic properties. This study investigates simplifications in both regards to predict infiltration and evaporation fluxes near or at the surface for a generic, rectangular watershed consisting of sand and silt loam columns. The two-dimensional flow problem (reference scenario) as well as simplifying 1-D problems are solved with the finite-element method (FEM) for 1, 10, 100, and 1000 m widths of the flow domain and different proportions of the sand and silt loam soils. The hydraulic functions are estimated from soil texture. In the simplifying scenarios, the flow domain is either represented as an equivalent soil using a weighted particle-size distribution as previously applied in physico-empirical predictions of hydraulic properties (a priori aggregation) or as two parallel stream tubes with area-weighted contributions to the total flux (a posteriori aggregation). Substantial differences were found between the fluxes based on the "equivalent" and reference scenarios even though our approach was based on a most favorable situation where only a limited number of texturedependent hydraulic parameters were different. The "stream tube" scenario typically provided a good description of the flux according to the reference scenario except for infiltration in case of domains less than 10 m wide. No pronounced textural differences are likely to occur over such small distances and the stream tube model appears to be a viable method to describe near-surface fluxes in catchments with a spatially variable soil texture.Item Open Access Preliminary analysis of sediment transport capacity in the Colorado Plateau(Colorado State University. Libraries, 2003) Milhous, Robert T., author; Colorado State University, publisherPrevious investigators (Hereford et al, 2002) have postulated there have been three climate regimes in the Colorado Plateau during the 20th Century: 1905-1941, 1942-1977, and 1978-1998. Changes in the ability of four rivers in the Colorado Plateau (USA) to transport sediment were investigated using the time series of an index (STCI) of the ability of the river to transport sediment. The four rivers are the Rio Puerco near Bernardo, NM; Paria River at Lees Ferry, AZ; Sevier River at Hatch, UT; and the Little Colorado at Woodruff, AZ. The index is calibrated to measured sediment concentrations. The Sediment Transport Capacity Index (STCI) time series graphs suggest there was a change in the climate about 1941 and there is a high probability a change in the climate also occurred in 1923. The situation for the postulated change in 1977 is not clear. There does appear to be changes between the dry 1942-1977 period and the wet 1978-1998 period but these are not the same in each of the four rivers. The STCI time series for the Sevier River had the expected pattern because the STCI increased nearly to the pre-1942 values from lower 1942-1977 values. The average STCI for the Little Colorado River increased but not nearly as much as suggested by the change in precipitation. The STCI for the Paria River essentially did not change. The real difference between expected change based on the change in precipitation, and the changes in the other three rivers, is the change in the time series of STCI for the Rio Puerco. The STCI of the Rio Puerco decreased significantly between the 1942-1997 period and the 1978-1998 period.Item Open Access Analysis of short-time single-ring infiltration under falling-head conditions with gravitational effects(Colorado State University. Libraries, 2003) Angulo-Jaramillo, Rafael, author; Elrick, David, author; Parlange, J.-Yves, author; Gérard-Marchant, Pierre, author; Haverkamp, Randel, author; Colorado State University, publisherAnalytical solutions of the flow equation for infiltration offer an interesting tool for the hydrodynamic characterization of non-saturated soils by optimization of the hydraulic conductivity, Kfs, and the capillary sorptivity, So. However, the experimental conditions have to satisfy the governing assumptions. For falling head infiltration tests the initial water height, Ho, is a third unknown parameter that has to be optimized. For the short0time, the classic solution expresses the depth of water infiltrated as a function of time as a term that depends only on the sorptivity. This, however, neglects gravitational effects. We improved the falling head infiltration problem, after a period of constant head infiltration, for the case of rigid materials without any assumptions for a particular hydraulic conductivity relationship and taking into account gravity effects. A comparison of two solutions, i.e., the equation of one and two terms, was made using the results of falling head infiltration tests. Neglecting the effects of gravity in the infiltration equation leads to an overestimation of the hydrodynamic parameters, Ho and So, and a concomitant underestimation of Kfs compared to our improved solution developed here. Consequently, the depth of ponded water predicted by the one term infiltration equation is higher than that calculated by the improved two term solution. Unfortunately, the actual depth of water infiltrated into the soil cannot be independently verified. To accomplish this, it is recommended that future studies include a measure of the change in stored soil water content at the test site, or a continuous measure of the variation in soil water content by a non-destructive method.Item Open Access Modeling the continental-scale dynamics of the coupled land-surface and atmospheric water balances with a stochastic differential equation(Colorado State University. Libraries, 2003) Kochendorfer, John P., author; RamÃrez, Jorge A., author; Colorado State University, publisherUsing a stochastic differential equation (SDE) approach, we examine the dynamics of the continental-scale water balance in the central United States. White-noise and colored-noise versions of the model are developed based on analysis of atmospheric data from the National Center for Environmental Prediction (NCEP) re-analysis project and long-term records of precipitation and soil moisture. Improved correspondence to observations is achieved by inclusion of terms in the SDE representing both hydrodynamic and thermodynamic soil-moisture feedbacks. We show that temporally correlated (i.e., colored) atmospheric moisture flux removes the bimodality of the soil moisture probability distribution and that our colored-noise formulation successfully captures the water balance dynamics in the study region despite the absence of multiple soil moisture states. Specifically, the improved model reproduces both the autocorrelation structure and the inter-annual variability in the observations.Item Open Access 2002 municipal response to drought in the Colorado Front Range(Colorado State University. Libraries, 2003) Kenney, Douglas, author; Klein, Roberta, author; Morrison, Adam, author; Colorado State University, publisherAs part of its ongoing efforts to analyze the vulnerability of water resources in Colorado's South Platte River Basin to the impacts of climate variability and regional growth, the Western Water Assessment examined the drought response of nine cities along the Front Range during the summer of 2002. Our hypothesis was that outdoor watering restrictions imposed in response to drought result in less water being consumed than would normally be expected, given climatic conditions and population growth. The study compared water use during summer of 2002 during restrictions to use in 2000 and 2001 when such restrictions were not in place. An additional goal was to compare cities to each other, identifying potential trends between different strategies and different levels of success. Results for each city are tabulated using a standardized methodology, allowing cross-city comparisons. The goal is to help municipal water managers assess and refine drought coping strategies.Item Open Access Criteria for risk evaluation in groundwater management projects: a comparative study(Colorado State University. Libraries, 2003) Miracapillo, Cinzia, author; Colorado State University, publisherEnvironmental protection criteria in the decision making process on the choice of a drainage system at a construction site in the city of Basel are presented here. A comparative quantitative evaluation between two drainage systems was possible focusing on the definition of equivalence criteria for aquifer protection and on the design of measures that guarantee the same safety level with respect to the above-mentioned criteria. The criteria discussed in this article are based on the hydraulic characteristics of the groundwater system, as they result from two-dimensional groundwater simulations in the area of the project.Item Open Access On the probabilistic characterization of drought events(Colorado State University. Libraries, 2003) Cancelliere, A., author; Bonaccorso, B., author; Rossi, G., author; Salas, J. D., author; Colorado State University, publisherDrought characterization is an important step in water resources systems planning and management. The assessment of extreme drought events may help decision makers to set effective drought mitigation tools. Drought events can be objectively identified by three main characteristics, namely: drought duration, accumulated deficit and drought intensity. In this paper the joint cumulative distribution functions (cdf's) of accumulated deficit and duration and of intensity and duration are derived as functions of the stochastic characteristics of the underlying variable, which is assumed to be either normal, lognormal, or gamma distributed. The derived cdf's are then applied to determine the return period of critical droughts by considering jointly two drought characteristics, e.g. droughts with accumulated deficit and duration greater than or equal to some fixed values. The methodology has been tested and applied using numerical simulations and records of annual precipitation series. The results of such applications show a good correspondence between the observed and the analytical results.Item Open Access The application of quantitative assessment of land use changes impact on water conservation for reservoir watershed(Colorado State University. Libraries, 2003) Chou, Tien-Yin, author; Xie, Zheng Dao, author; Chen, Mei-Hsin, author; Colorado State University, publisherThe recent increased pressure on slope land development in Taiwan has changed the land use pattern in many reservoir watershed areas and affected the hydrologic cycle. There were many local researches examined this related issue, but none of that can fully describe the relationship between water conservation capacity and land use patterns in watershed area. This study is to integrate and analyze the impact to water conservation from deforestation or other land use pattern changes. In this study, an integrated methodology combining Geographic Information Systems (GIS), Remote Sensing (RS), Global Positioning System (GPS), and hydrologic simulation program (HSPF) is utilized to define the factor-consequence relationship of this issue from digital database, satellite images, land use pattern identification, and hydrology model, in respectively. The first part of this research was to determine those factors influenced the hydrological processes, which includes water balance parameters extraction for various input data in hydrological model. Secondly, an environmentally sound database was built using GIS, RS and GPS technologies. Then HSPF hydrologic model was used to estimate the quantity of water conservation capacity. The last part was to link the database with water conservation model and estimate the changes due to land use development. This research also use ArcView Avenue Script and C++ to establish an user interface, that provides users to input data and output the results. It can get the volume change of water conservation capacity caused by land use change real time. It provides watershed manager the reference in reservoirs watershed area conservation and development policy.Item Open Access Improving MODFLOW's RIVER package for unsaturated stream/aquifer flow(Colorado State University. Libraries, 2003) Fox, Garey, author; Colorado State University, publisherSaturated flow is typically assumed for seepage from a stream underlain by an alluvial aquifer. However, if the water table in an unconfined aquifer falls a sufficient distance below the streambed, the head losses in this less conductive layer will cause the region beneath the streambed to become unsaturated. Unsaturated flow transforms streams from constant head boundaries to constant flux boundaries, impacting not only the quantity of stream recharge but also biogeochemical transformations. The objective of this paper is to analyze the impact of unsaturated flow on stream/aquifer exchange. The modeling capabilities of one of the most commonly used groundwater flow models, MODFLOW, in simulating unsaturated stream/aquifer exchange is improved. The effects of unsaturated flow on MODFLOW predictions of aquifer drawdown and stream leakage are illustrated for hypothetical stream/aquifer systems.Item Open Access Engineering design parameters of storms in Venezuela(Colorado State University. Libraries, 2003) Guevara, Edilberto, author; Colorado State University, publisherThis research deals with hydrologic analysis to estimation engineering design parameters of storms in Venezuela, which help hydrologists to improve their environmental designs. This analysis focus on storm advancement coefficient r (SAC) to establish storm pluviographs; Intensity Duration Frequency (IDF); and Area - Depth – Duration relationships (ADD). Based on the analysis of 275 storm events, values of r were calculated obtaining a mean value of 0.41 and a standard deviation of 0.075, and being 61 , 30 and 9 % of the storms from the advanced, retarded and symmetric type respectively. Rainfall data of 162 recorders spread all over the country were used for the IDF analysis, using nevertheless instead traditional analysis a model that allows to estimate peak rainfall/intensities for any duration and frequency based on the General Equation for Hydrologic Frequency Analysis (GEHFA), in conjunction with a transform function that linearize the mass curve of the accumulated rainfall amounts and the method of minimum squares to estimate the parameters of the GEHFA: mean, μ, and standard deviations of the rainfall extremes. The results are given as equations for μ and σ; correlation coefficients are higher than 0.99. Based on the analysis of 47 storms occurred on Northeast, Andes, Central and Central West regions of Venezuela, lineal models for Area Reduction Factors as function of D were developed, with correlation coefficients values over 0.980. Design rainfall hyetographs are built base on estimated r values and the established IDF model. Furthermore, Area Reduction Factor models can be used to reduce rainfall point values.Item Open Access History of hydraulics and fluid mechanics at Colorado State University(Colorado State University. Libraries, 2003) Julien, Pierre Y., author; Meroney, Robert N., author; Colorado State University, publisherThe development of hydraulics and fluid mechanics at Colorado State University is reviewed in reference to those who pioneered the analysis of hydraulic and wind engineering. The article will first cover the "early developments" with Elwood Meade, Charles Lory, Ralph Parshall and Emory Lane during the Colorado A&M period. The name change to Colorado State University initiated considerable expansion through fruitful collaboration with the USGS and the USBR. The "expansion years" featured the contributions of Maury Albertson, Hunter Rouse, Jack Cermak and Everett Richardson with direct administrative support from Lionel Baldwin, Daryl Simons and Ray Chamberlain. The more recent "mature period" saw broadening of the programs and expansion into environmental engineering. The emphasis of the article will be on the historical contribution of CSU to hydraulics and fluid mechanics. Some of the key scientific achievements will be reviewed. There will be a brief documentation of the interaction between faculty activities, academic programs and research facilities that led to rapid growth and development. The success and visibility of the programs also hinged on several other factors including significant contributions at the international level through projects in Pakistan (Tarbela Dam) and Egypt.Item Open Access Estimating streambed and aquifer parameters from a stream/aquifer analysis test(Colorado State University. Libraries, 2003) Fox, Garey, author; Colorado State University, publisherThe Tamarack State Wildlife Area in eastern Colorado is being investigated as a possible managed recharge project to redirect flows in the South Platte River for water quantity management. Two primary surface water/groundwater interactions exist at Tamarack: (1) between the South Platte River and alluvial aquifer and (2) between backwater sloughs, or secondary river channels, and the alluvial aquifer. Knowledge of river/slough/groundwater interaction could play a vital role in the design and operation of the recharge system. Quantifying the magnitude of stream/aquifer interaction requires estimates of the streambed hydraulic conductivity. Silt, clay, and organic materials are often deposited in streams resulting in the streambed having a lower hydraulic conductivity than the underlying alluvial aquifer. A stream/aquifer analysis test is performed at the site to investigate the surface water/groundwater interaction during alluvial well depletions. Water levels are measured in the alluvial aquifer, slough, and South Platte River to determine the depletive effects of pumping. The stream/aquifer analysis test is also used to investigate the use of recently proposed analytical solutions for inversely estimating streambed conductivity and aquifer parameters from observed aquifer drawdown. Estimates of aquifer parameters are compared to data from recent aquifer tests and estimates from published reports. Estimated streambed conductivity is compared to in-situ measurements using falling-head permeameter tests.