(Press-News.org) Growing communities and extensive agriculture throughout the Western United States rely on meltwater that spills out of snow-capped mountains every spring. The models for predicting the amount of this streamflow available each year have long assumed that a small fraction of snowmelt each year enters shallow soil, with the remainder rapidly exiting in rivers and creeks.
New research from University of Utah hydrologists, however, suggests that streamflow generation is much more complicated. Most spring runoff heading to reservoirs is actually several years old, indicating that most mountain snowfall has a years-long invisible journey as groundwater before it leaves the mountains.
The findings also indicate there is an order of magnitude more water stored underground than most Western water managers account for, said research leader Paul Brooks, a professor of geology and geophysics.
“On average, it takes over five years for a snowflake that falls in the mountains to exit as streamflow,” Brooks said. “Most of our models, whether for predicting streamflow or predicting how much water trees will have in dry years, are based on the idea that there’s very little water stored in the mountains. Now we know that that’s not the case. Most of the water goes into the ground and it sits there for somewhere between three and 15 years before it’s either used by plants or it goes into the streams.”
The team collected runoff samples at 42 sites and used tritium isotope analysis to determine the age of the water, that is how much time elapsed since it fell from the sky as snow.
Published this week in the journal Nature Communications Earth & Environment, the findings were co-authored by Utah geology professors Sara Warix and Kip Solomon in collaboration with research scientists around the West.
Determining the age of mountain streamflow is a prerequisite for predicting how mountain hydrology will respond to changes in climate and land use, the researchers said.
“We know if our streams are being supported by water that’s 5 to 15 years old, there’s got to be a lag between input storage and response. And so even though our models have been good in the past, good enough to make decisions about water use, the inputs to our systems are changing. There’s going to be changes throughout the subsurface that are reflected in streams,” Warix said. “If we want to make good decisions moving forward, we need to incorporate that groundwater storage component because past mechanisms, past processes are not going to be the same in 20 or 50 years.”
Brooks conducted the sampling in 2022 while on sabbatical, visiting 42 sites twice, once in the midwinter to capture the stream’s “base flow” that was presumably fed entirely by groundwater and again during the spring runoff.
“The sampling sites are locations where there was a fair amount of existing research, a geographical distribution from the front range of Colorado to the eastern slopes of the Sierra,” Brooks said. The sites were in Idaho, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, California and New Mexico, representing five major river basins. Most have long-term research catchments funded by the U.S. Geological Survey, the National Science Foundation or the Department of Energy.
The state of Utah’s tracking is particularly robust, providing continuous streamflow data dating back 120 years. It’s an unparalleled dataset that has enabled hydrologists to document historic cycles in climate and streamflow that would otherwise have been missed, Brooks said.
According to Solomon, the vast majority of Earth’s fresh, usable water is underground, but just how much is there remains a puzzle. Dating water offers clues, and for determining the age of water, Solomon turns to tritium, a radioactive isotope of hydrogen with a half-life of 12.3 years.
Tritium is produced naturally in the upper atmosphere, is a byproduct of nuclear reactors, and was once produced during weapons testing during the Cold War. By determining how many atoms of tritium are in a water sample relative to other hydrogen atoms, scientists can calculate when water fell from the sky as precipitation—but only as far back as a century.
The average age of the runoff sampled in the study varies among the catchment basins depending on their geology. The more porous the ground, the older its water is, since the subsurface can hold a lot more water. By contrast, glaciated canyons with low permeability and shallow bedrock, such as Utah’s Little Cottonwood Canyon, provide far less subsurface storage and younger waters, according to the study.
For decades, federal and state water managers have relied on a network of snowpack monitoring sites to provide data to guide forecasts of water availability for the upcoming year. It’s now clear that such snowpack data doesn’t provide a complete picture, according to the researchers.
“For much of the West, especially the Interior West where this study is based, our models have been losing skill,” Brooks said.
The growing disconnect between snowfall, snowpack volumes and streamflow is driven by variability in these large, previously unquantified subsurface water stores. As a case in point, Brooks highlighted the 2022 water year, which saw snowpacks in many Western states that were near or just below average. Yet that year experienced record low groundwater storage, resulting in much below average spring streamflow.
The study titled “Groundwater dominates snowmelt runoff and controls streamflow efficiency in the western United States,” was published May 3 in Nature Communications Earth & Environment and was supported by the National Science Foundation. The research team included several scientists from other research universities in Utah, Arizona, Colorado, Idaho and Nevada, as well as the U.S. Geological Survey and the Department of Agriculture.
END
The West’s spring runoff is older than you think
Utah hydrologists show most streamflow out of mountains is old snowmelt on a multi-year underground journey.
2025-05-06
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Halo patterns around coral reefs may signal resilience
2025-05-06
In coral reefs throughout the world, visually striking bands of bare sand surrounding reefs are often visible in satellite imagery but their cause remains a mystery.
One theory is fear. Parrotfish and other herbivores will leave a reef's shelter to eat algae or the surrounding seagrass, but their fear of being gobbled up by predators may keep them from roving too far or eating too much, creating, what's known as "grazing halos"–bands encircling reefs where vegetation once existed.
Prior studies have proposed that ...
Evidence review raises concern about cannabis use in pregnancy
2025-05-06
An updated systematic review finds that consuming cannabis while pregnant appears to increase the odds of preterm birth, low birth weight and infant death.
The study by researchers at Oregon Health & Science University published today in the journal JAMA Pediatrics.
The lead author is a physician-scientist who provides prenatal care for high-risk pregnancies at OHSU.
“Patients are coming to me in their prenatal visits saying, ‘I quit smoking and drinking, but is it safe to still use cannabis?’” said lead author Jamie Lo, M.D., ...
A new method for characterizing quantum gate errors
2025-05-06
Researchers have developed a new protocol for benchmarking quantum gates, a critical step toward realizing the full potential of quantum computing and potentially accelerating progress toward fault-tolerant quantum computers.
The new protocol, called deterministic benchmarking (DB), provides a more detailed and efficient method for identifying specific types of quantum noise and errors compared to widely used existing techniques.
“Quantum computing is ultimately limited by how accurately we can implement gates — the basic operations of a quantum processor,” said Daniel Lidar, co-corresponding author of the study and ...
Shingles vaccine lowers the risk of heart disease for up to eight years
2025-05-06
People who are given a vaccine for shingles have a 23% lower risk of cardiovascular events, including stroke, heart failure, and coronary heart disease, according to a study of more than a million people published in the European Heart Journal [1] today (Tuesday).
The protective effect of the vaccine lasts for up to eight years and is particularly pronounced for men, people under the age of 60 and those with unhealthy lifestyles, such as smoking, drinking alcohol and being inactive.
The study was led by Professor Dong Keon Yon from the Kyung Hee University College of Medicine, Seoul, South Korea. He said: “Shingles ...
Children as young as five can navigate a 'tiny town'
2025-05-05
Many behavioral studies suggest that using landmarks to navigate through large-scale spaces — known as map-based navigation — is not established until around age 12.
A neuroscience study at Emory University counters that assumption. Through experiments combining brain scans and a virtual environment the researchers dubbed Tiny Town, they showed that five-year-olds have the brain system that supports map-based navigation.
The journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences published ...
New study highlights mental health challenges among Ecuadorian healthcare providers during COVID-19
2025-05-05
A recent study conducted by researchers from Universidad San Francisco de Quito and Johns Hopkins University has revealed critical insights into the mental health of healthcare providers in Ecuador during the COVID-19 pandemic. Published in journal Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness, this research examines the balance between compassion satisfaction, burnout, and secondary traumatic stress among healthcare professionals working in public institutions across Ecuador, a low-and middle-income country.
The study surveyed 2,873 healthcare providers from 111 public institutions across 23 provinces in Ecuador ...
US Naval Research Laboratory’s NIKE laser-target facility helps to advance Department of Defense nuclear mission
2025-05-05
WASHINGTON, D.C. — The U.S. Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) has announced a new strategic direction for its NIKE laser-target facility to align its world-class capabilities with the Department of Defense’s (DoD) nuclear strategic priorities.
The new strategic direction marks a shift from the facility’s historical focus on Department of Energy (DoE) missions, specifically those related to the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA). The initiative emphasizes NRL’s commitment to advancing national security through cutting-edge science and technology.
Originally constructed in 1995 with support from the NNSA, the NIKE (pronounced nai-kee) laser was designed ...
Study: PTSD patients show long-term benefits with vagus nerve stimulation
2025-05-05
In a first-of-its-kind clinical study, scientists at The University of Texas at Dallas and Baylor University Medical Center showed that patients with treatment-resistant PTSD were symptom-free up to six months after completing traditional therapy paired with vagus nerve stimulation (VNS).
The results of the nine-patient Phase 1 trial, conducted by scientists from UT Dallas’ Texas Biomedical Device Center (TxBDC) in collaboration with researchers from the Baylor Scott & White Research Institute (BSWRI), were published online March 15 in Brain Stimulation.
Dr. Michael Kilgard, the Margaret Fonde Jonsson Professor of neuroscience in the School of Behavioral ...
New health assessment tool gauges body’s biological age
2025-05-05
A novel health-assessment tool uses eight metrics derived from a person’s physical exam and routine lab tests to characterize biological age. It may be able to predict a person’s risk of disability and death better than current health predictors.
University of Washington School of Medicine researchers describe their method in a May 5 Nature Communication paper.
The method, called the Health Octo Tool, might make it possible to identify new factors that affect aging, and to design interventions that prolong life, said the report’s first author, Dr. Shabnam ...
Pharmacies excluded from preferred networks face much higher risk of closure
2025-05-05
Key takeaways:
Retail pharmacies excluded from Part D networks were as much as 4.5 times more likely to close in the past decade
Growing use of preferred networks disadvantages independent pharmacies, as well as those in low-income or minority neighborhoods
Use of preferred pharmacy networks has soared amid mergers of major PBMs and retail pharmacy chains
PBM ownership of pharmacies has recently drawn scrutiny from federal and state officials
Retail pharmacies excluded from Medicare Part D networks maintained by drug benefits middlemen were much more ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
A threesome that hatches potato parasites
Young people discover the technologies shaping their future in the World Economic Forum and Frontiers for Young Minds collection
Real-time 3D visualization reveals potent antibacterial and antibiofilm activity against superbacteria
Abnormal uterine bleeding and insulin resistance are on the rise: Is there a connection?
Eye wear breakthrough: MXene-coated lenses for safer and smarter wearables
‘AI scientist’ suggests combinations of widely available non-cancer drugs can kill cancer cells
Phage therapy at a turning point: Global experts converge in Berlin to shape the future of antimicrobial medicine
Low calorie diets linked to heightened risk of depressive symptoms
Bronchiolitis, monoclonal antibody halves hospitalizations of children younger than six months old
Mum’s obesity linked to child’s heightened hospital admission risk for infection
Millions of new solar system objects to be found and ‘filmed in technicolor’ – studies predict
Pitt study has upended decades-old assumptions about brain plasticity
Hertz Foundation partners with Analog Devices to empower future leaders in analog, digital and software technology solutions
Would you hand over your health data if it meant better care?
Study examines how well wearable tech tracks fitness metrics
Dr. Nikolaos Koundouros wins 2025 Tri-Institutional Breakout Award
Low vs. High blood pressure avoidance in non-cardiac surgery: Neurocognitive outcomes unchanged
Telehealth can improve care for cats with chronic health issues
Researchers develop innovative model to study sense of smell
Birds may be drinking on the wing, but in moderation
Collaboration can unlock Australia’s energy transition without sacrificing natural capital
Study identifies proteins involved in the effectiveness of immunotherapy against blood cancer
Cannabis extract could treat fungal diseases
Pancreatic cancer spreads to liver or lung thanks to this protein
Eating an array of smaller fish could be nutrient-dense solution to overfishing
Han studying potential of next generation telepresence
Emory study finds molecular link between air pollution and pregnancy risks
Controlling bacteria with light: from tackling antibiotic resistance to “bacterial robots”
Johns Hopkins study shows how scientists can use black holes as supercolliders
Being incarcerated and living in areas where more have gone to jail is associated with higher death rates
[Press-News.org] The West’s spring runoff is older than you thinkUtah hydrologists show most streamflow out of mountains is old snowmelt on a multi-year underground journey.