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Review: Regional groundwater flow modeling in heavily irrigated basins of selected states in the western United States | Revue: Modélisation régionale des écoulements souterrains dans des bassins avec une forte irrigation dans des états sélectionnés de l’Ouest des Etats-Unis d’Amérique Revisión: Modelos de flujo regional de agua subterránea en cuencas fuertemente irrigadas de estados seleccionados en el oeste de Estados Unidos 综述:美国西部选定区域中大量灌溉盆地的区域地下水径流模拟 Revisão: Modelação regional de fluxo de águas subterrâneas em bacias fortemente irrigadas em estados selecionados no oeste dos Estados Unidos Texto completo
2013
Rossman, Nathan R. | Zlotnik, Vitaly A.
Water resources in agriculture-dominated basins of the arid western United States are stressed due to long-term impacts from pumping. A review of 88 regional groundwater-flow modeling applications from seven intensively irrigated western states (Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Kansas, Nebraska and Texas) was conducted to provide hydrogeologists, modelers, water managers, and decision makers insight about past modeling studies that will aid future model development. Groundwater models were classified into three types: resource evaluation models (39%), which quantify water budgets and act as preliminary models intended to be updated later, or constitute re-calibrations of older models; management/planning models (55%), used to explore and identify management plans based on the response of the groundwater system to water-development or climate scenarios, sometimes under water-use constraints; and water rights models (7%), used to make water administration decisions based on model output and to quantify water shortages incurred by water users or climate changes. Results for 27 model characteristics are summarized by state and model type, and important comparisons and contrasts are highlighted. Consideration of modeling uncertainty and the management focus toward sustainability, adaptive management and resilience are discussed, and future modeling recommendations, in light of the reviewed models and other published works, are presented.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]An approach to hydrogeological modeling of a large system of groundwater-fed lakes and wetlands in the Nebraska Sand Hills, USA | Approche par modélisation hydrogéologique d’un vaste système de lacs et de zones humides alimentés par des eaux souterraines dans les Sand Hills du Nebraska, Etats-Unis d’Amérique Un enfoque para la modelización hidrogeológica de un gran sistema de lagos y humedales alimentados por agua subterránea en Nebraska Sand Hills, EE UU 美国内布拉斯加州Sand Hills地区地下水补给的湖泊和湿地巨大系统的水文地质模拟方法 Uma abordagem para modelagem hidrogeológica de um amplo sistema de lagos e zonas húmidas alimentados por águas subterrâneas em Nebraska Sand Hills, EUA Texto completo
2018
Rossman, NathanR. | Zlotnik, VitalyA. | Rowe, ClintonM.
The feasibility of a hydrogeological modeling approach to simulate several thousand shallow groundwater-fed lakes and wetlands without explicitly considering their connection with groundwater is investigated at the regional scale (~40,000 km²) through an application in the semi-arid Nebraska Sand Hills (NSH), USA. Hydraulic heads are compared to local land-surface elevations from a digital elevation model (DEM) within a geographic information system to assess locations of lakes and wetlands. The water bodies are inferred where hydraulic heads exceed, or are above a certain depth below, the land surface. Numbers of lakes and/or wetlands are determined via image cluster analysis applied to the same 30-m grid as the DEM after interpolating both simulated and estimated heads. The regional water-table map was used for groundwater model calibration, considering MODIS-based net groundwater recharge data. Resulting values of simulated total baseflow to interior streams are within 1% of observed values. Locations, areas, and numbers of simulated lakes and wetlands are compared with Landsat 2005 survey data and with areas of lakes from a 1979–1980 Landsat survey and the National Hydrography Dataset. This simplified process-based modeling approach avoids the need for field-based morphology or water-budget data from individual lakes or wetlands, or determination of lake-groundwater exchanges, yet it reproduces observed lake-wetland characteristics at regional groundwater management scales. A better understanding of the NSH hydrogeology is attained, and the approach shows promise for use in simulations of groundwater-fed lake and wetland characteristics in other large groundwater systems.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Determining the impacts of experimental forest plantation on groundwater recharge in the Nebraska Sand Hills (USA) using chloride and sulfate | Détermination des impacts d’une plantation forestière expérimentale sur la recharge des aquifères dans les Sand Hills du Nebraska (USA) en utilisant des chlorures et du sulfate Determinación de los impactos de plantaciones forestales experimentales sobre la recarga de agua subterránea en las Nebraska Sand Hills (USA) usando cloruro y sulfato 利用氯化物和硫酸盐确定实验性植树造林对(美国)内布拉斯加州沙丘地下水补给的影响 Determinação do impacte de plantações florestais experimentais sobre a recarga de águas subterrâneas, nas Sand Hills, Nebrasca (EUA), através do uso de cloreto e sulfato Texto completo
2015
Adane, Z. A. | Gates, J. B.
Although impacts of land-use changes on groundwater recharge have been widely demonstrated across diverse environmental settings, most previous research has focused on the role of agriculture. This study investigates recharge impacts of tree plantations in a century-old experimental forest surrounded by mixed-grass prairie in the Northern High Plains (Nebraska National Forest), USA. Recharge was estimated using solute mass balance methods from unsaturated zone cores beneath 10 experimental plots with different vegetation and planting densities. Pine and cedar plantation plots had uniformly lower moisture contents and higher solute concentrations than grasslands. Cumulative solute concentrations were greatest beneath the plots with the highest planting densities (chloride concentrations 225–240 % and sulfate concentrations 175–230 % of the grassland plot). Estimated recharge rates beneath the dense plantations (4–10 mm yr⁻¹) represent reductions of 86–94 % relative to the surrounding native grassland. Relationships between sulfate, chloride, and moisture content in the area’s relatively homogenous sandy soils confirm that the unsaturated zone solute signals reflect partitioning between drainage and evapotranspiration in this setting. This study is among the first to explore afforestation impacts on recharge beneath sandy soils and sulfate as a tracer of deep drainage.
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