Dr. David Boutt– Distinguished Lecturer

If you’d like to request a lecture(s) then please fill out this form.



 
The Geologic Society of America–Hydrogeology Division announcement can be found on their website.

 


Lecture Topics


Groundwater as a Buffer to Climatic Change: Dynamic Subsurface Storage of Glaciated Landscapes

click below for abstract

Groundwater & Climate Change

Do you know where your catchment ends? The role of inter-basin groundwater flow and hydrogeologic transience in hydrologic processes.

click below for abstract

Interbasin Groundwater Flow

Water and Lithium – The nexus of hydrogeosciences and green energy in the transition from fossil fuels

click below for abstract

Water & Lithium


About David Boutt


David Boutt is an Associate Professor in the Department of Geosciences at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst.  He received B.S. and M.S. degrees from the Department of Geological Sciences at Michigan State University in 1997 and 1999.  His MS work focused on understanding the impacts of land-use change on groundwater quantity and quality at the watershed-scale.  He earned his Ph.D. from the New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology (Socorro, New Mexico, USA) in 2004 and held a postdoctoral position at Sandia National Laboratories before joining the faculty at UMass-Amherst in 2005. During his Ph.D. research he was awarded an AGU Horton Research Grant.  Dr. Boutt’s dissertation work focused on the coupling of fluid flow and deformation in fractured and faulted media through the development of discretely-coupled fluid-solid models. His current research program focuses on understanding the role of groundwater in catchment-scale hydrologic processes. This involves delineating the contribution of groundwater storage to stream flow generation, spring discharge, and hydrologic budgets. He maintains an active and dynamic research laboratory with dedicated students ranging from undergraduates to PhD students. His research interests have taken him on board the Japanese Drilling Vessel Chikyu during IODP Expedition 319 – the first riser drilling operation in IODP history – to wild of the Atacama desert in Chile.  Some of his current work is focused on understanding the origin of lithium-rich continental brines in northern Chile and in the Great Basin of the western United States.  Dr. Boutt has also contributed extensively to understanding the hydrogeology of a former cranberry bog that is part of the largest freshwater restoration project in New England (http://www.livingobservatory.org/). A list of his publications can be found here. Boutt has served the hydrogeologic and broader geoscience communities by serving on proposal review panels and volunteer boards. Boutt has been a member of GSA since 1997 and has convened many topical sessions at GSA national meetings. He is currently an editor for the journal Hydrological Processes, and he was previously an associate editor for Hydrogeology journal.