SEASONAL AND EVENT-DEPENDENT SURFACE WATER/GROUNDWATER INTERACTIONS ALONG A CRITICAL REACH OF THE RIO GRANDE
Pressure transducers have been installed at 70 surface and groundwater monitoring points to provide a high-resolution picture of seasonal, event-dependent, and diurnal water losses/gains from the river to the shallow aquifer. The magnitude and direction of vertical gradients are dependent on river stage, and vary seasonally. Monitoring wells adjacent to the river show an almost immediate response to monsoonal-induced changes in river stage and the return to base flow conditions. During a September 2003 flood event, deeper wells showed a stronger pressure response than water table wells, temporarily reversing the downward vertical gradient. Diurnal groundwater fluctuations are pronounced from early spring until late fall, and cease when stretches of the Rio Grande dry. Daily groundwater table fluctuations in July and August ranged from 5 to 95 mm/day, apparently controlled by evapotranspirative demand and site geology.