Mike Wei, Hydro Geo Logic
Farimah Arabchobdar, Dalhousie University
Karl Butler, University of New Brunswick
Yoni Ryuh, University of Waterloo
Fernando Cordoba Ramirez, Dalhousie University
The hydrology in coastal environments is influenced by complex interactions between terrestrial, marine, atmospheric, and human processes. Effective management, restoration and protection of coastal water resources and ecosystems require improved measurements, modeling and prediction of natural surface and subsurface hydrological processes and the impacts of human activities. This session invites submissions that explore natural processes and the effects of human activities on coastal hydrology and hydrogeology. Topic areas include: groundwater-surface water interactions in coastal environments, including their effects on water and chemical fluxes; hydrologic controls on sediment supply, geomorphology and/or salinity; contamination of coastal groundwater or surface waters; and impacts of climate change and human-driven alterations on coastal hydrological/hydrogeological processes.
• 2:00 pm – 2:15 pm | Developing a Saltwater Intrusion Risk Map for Newfoundland and Labrador – Ryan Threndyle
• 2:15 pm – 2:30 pm | GIS Modelling of Seawater Intrusion Risk along the Coast of British Columbia, Canada – Mike Wei
• 2:30 pm – 2:45 pm | Porewater pressure response from near and within an earthen dyke structure due to tidal signals – Farimah Arabchobdar
• 2:45 pm – 3:00 pm | Can geoelectrical surveys effectively screen Bay of Fundy flood dykes for internal vulnerabilities? – Karl Butler
• 3:00 pm – 3:15 pm | Experimental Insights into chlorine and bromine isotope fractionation during seawater evaporation – Yongyung Ryuh
• 3:15 pm – 3:30 pm | Controlled-Source Electromagnetic Characterization of Freshened Offshore Aquifers on the Formerly Glaciated Continental Shelf of Prince Edward Island, Canada. – Fernando Córdoba-Ramírez
Halifax NS
Canada