River and hyporheic zone water geochemical data from OsmoSamplers, East River Pumphouse, Colorado, Nov 2017-Sept 2018
Abstract
This data package contains geochemical and river water temperature data from OsmoSamplers deployed at East River, Colorado pump house. There are three data files. The first one contains sulfate (SO4) and chloride (Cl) concentrations from riverwater and hyporheic zone (sediment water interface (SWI), 4 cm below seafloor (cmbsf), and 12 (cmbsf)). The second file contains methane concentrations, methane stable carbon isotope ratios and water isotopes from hyporheic zone porewaters. And the third is from a temperature logger during the deployment. Files are provided as .xls or .csv. This research was performed as part of the SBR funded project “Quantifying Subsurface Biogeochemical Variability in a High Altitude Watershed During Winter Isolation” DE-SC0018328. The novel part of this dataset is that we quantify these geochemical parameters throughout the winter isolation period, which is difficult to measure, as well as within the hyporheic zone. The data files were updated 3/1/2021 because the column label for the water isotopes was incorrect. Also, the csv files were also updated since they were not formatted correctly.
- Authors:
-
- University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science; University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science
- Publication Date:
- Research Org.:
- Environmental System Science Data Infrastructure for a Virtual Ecosystem; Quantifying Subsurface Biogeochemical Variability in a High Altitude Watershed During Winter Isolation
- Sponsoring Org.:
- US.DOE. > Office of Science > Subsurface Biogeochemical Research (SBR)
- Subject:
- 54 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES; biogeochemistry; methane; stable isotopes; temporal subsetting
- OSTI Identifier:
- 1766092
- DOI:
- https://doi.org/10.15485/1766092
Citation Formats
Lapham, Laura, Buser-Young, Jessica, Thurber, Andrew, and Colwell, Fredrick. River and hyporheic zone water geochemical data from OsmoSamplers, East River Pumphouse, Colorado, Nov 2017-Sept 2018. United States: N. p., 2021.
Web. doi:10.15485/1766092.
Lapham, Laura, Buser-Young, Jessica, Thurber, Andrew, & Colwell, Fredrick. River and hyporheic zone water geochemical data from OsmoSamplers, East River Pumphouse, Colorado, Nov 2017-Sept 2018. United States. doi:https://doi.org/10.15485/1766092
Lapham, Laura, Buser-Young, Jessica, Thurber, Andrew, and Colwell, Fredrick. 2021.
"River and hyporheic zone water geochemical data from OsmoSamplers, East River Pumphouse, Colorado, Nov 2017-Sept 2018". United States. doi:https://doi.org/10.15485/1766092. https://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/1766092. Pub date:Tue Feb 09 04:00:00 UTC 2021
@article{osti_1766092,
title = {River and hyporheic zone water geochemical data from OsmoSamplers, East River Pumphouse, Colorado, Nov 2017-Sept 2018},
author = {Lapham, Laura and Buser-Young, Jessica and Thurber, Andrew and Colwell, Fredrick},
abstractNote = {This data package contains geochemical and river water temperature data from OsmoSamplers deployed at East River, Colorado pump house. There are three data files. The first one contains sulfate (SO4) and chloride (Cl) concentrations from riverwater and hyporheic zone (sediment water interface (SWI), 4 cm below seafloor (cmbsf), and 12 (cmbsf)). The second file contains methane concentrations, methane stable carbon isotope ratios and water isotopes from hyporheic zone porewaters. And the third is from a temperature logger during the deployment. Files are provided as .xls or .csv. This research was performed as part of the SBR funded project “Quantifying Subsurface Biogeochemical Variability in a High Altitude Watershed During Winter Isolation” DE-SC0018328. The novel part of this dataset is that we quantify these geochemical parameters throughout the winter isolation period, which is difficult to measure, as well as within the hyporheic zone. The data files were updated 3/1/2021 because the column label for the water isotopes was incorrect. Also, the csv files were also updated since they were not formatted correctly.},
doi = {10.15485/1766092},
journal = {},
number = ,
volume = ,
place = {United States},
year = {Tue Feb 09 04:00:00 UTC 2021},
month = {Tue Feb 09 04:00:00 UTC 2021}
}
