In downloading this resource contents you are ethically bound to respect the terms of this license.
Please confirm that you accept the terms of this license below before you can do any downloads for this resource.
Resource License Agreement
This resource is shared under the Creative Commons Attribution CC BY.
In downloading this resource contents you are ethically bound to respect the terms of this license.
Please confirm that you accept the terms of this license below before you can do any downloads for this resource.
Please wait for the process to complete.
Redirecting to the referenced web URL
The content you have requested to access is not stored in HydroShare, and we can’t guarantee its availability,
quality, security, or size. If the externally linked content is large, access may take time.
Get file URL
You have requested the URL for a file that is within a Discoverable resource.
This resource has Private Link Sharing enabled.
This means that anyone with the link will be able to access the file,
but users without the link will not be permitted unless they have "view" permission on this resource.
You have requested the URL for a file that is within a Discoverable resource.
Only you and other HydroShare users who have been granted at least "view" permission will be able to access this URL.
If you want this URL to be publicly available,
change the sharing status of your resource to "public" or enable Private Link Sharing.
You have requested the URL for a file that is within a Private resource.
This resource has Private Link Sharing enabled.
This means that anyone with the link will be able to access the file,
but users without the link will not be permitted unless they have "view" permission on this resource.
You have requested the URL for a file that is within a Private resource.
Only you and other HydroShare users who have been granted at least "view" permission will be able to access this URL.
If you want this URL to be publicly available, change the sharing status of your resource to "public" or enable Private Link Sharing.
Choose coordinates
Checking for non-preferred file/folder path names (may take a long time depending on the number of files/folders) ...
The following files/folders contain non-preferred characters in their name.
This may result in problems and you are encouraged to change the name to follow the
HydroShare preferred character set.
Within the Harz mountains, Central Germany, two sub-catchments from the intensively studied Selke basin were selected for the investigation of nitrogen dynamics in agricultural dominated headwater catchments. The dataset comprises detailed data of water samples collected in two sub-catchments of the Selke basin: the Meisdorfer Sauerbach and Schäferbach catchment. The two streams are tributaries to the Bode catchment, thoroughly studied within the TERENO network. With stable isotopic signatures of nitrate in various hydrological compartments (e.g. soil water, groundwater, surface water and precipitation) as well as data of nitrate concentrations, discharge and precipitation measurements, an analysis to further understand processes within the groundwater-surface water continuum of the two catchments is intended. Analysis as part of a master’s thesis revealed that even though, results of δ15N-NO3 and δ18O-NO3 are highly variable, both catchments are clearly influenced by agricultural land use. Thus, manure and fertilizers are identified to be two of the main anthropogenic nitrogen sources. Furthermore, the Meisdorfer Sauerbach shows an urban influence of the city Opperode located close to the stream. Additionally, septic waste is determined to be one of the main anthropogenic sources within this catchment. Biogeochemical processes, such as nitrification, denitrification, assimilation, and the decoupled enrichment of δ15N and δ18O, influence the stable isotopic signature of both catchments.
This resource contains links to external content. Linked content is
NOT stored in HydroShare, and we can't guarantee its availability, quality, or
security.
Confirm files deletion
This file will be permanently deleted. Consider saving a copy if it is
important to you. If this is the last file in the resource and it is public,
the sharing status will revert to private. If you are not the owner of
this resource, then an owner will need to reset this to public after a new
file has been added. If you want to replace this file, add the new file
first then delete the old one, so that sharing status does not change.
Wegner et al. Comparative assessment of the nitrogen dynamics in the groundwater - surface water continuum in two agricultural headwater catchments - Master's thesis
Comments
There are currently no comments
New Comment