TY - CONF
T1 - A high resolution global scale groundwater model
AU - de Graaf, Inge
AU - Sutanudjaja, Edwin
AU - van Beek, Rens
AU - Bierkens, Marc
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - As the world's largest accessible source of freshwater, groundwater
plays a vital role in satisfying the basic needs of human society. It
serves as a primary source of drinking water and supplies water for
agricultural and industrial activities. During times of drought,
groundwater storage provides a large natural buffer against water
shortage and sustains flows to rivers and wetlands, supporting ecosystem
habitats and biodiversity. Yet, the current generation of global scale
hydrological models (GHMs) do not include a groundwater flow component,
although it is a crucial part of the hydrological cycle. Thus, a
realistic physical representation of the groundwater system that allows
for the simulation of groundwater head dynamics and lateral flows is
essential for GHMs that increasingly run at finer resolution. In this
study we present a global groundwater model with a resolution of 5
arc-minutes (approximately 10 km at the equator) using MODFLOW (McDonald
and Harbaugh, 1988). With this global groundwater model we eventually
intend to simulate the changes in the groundwater system over time that
result from variations in recharge and abstraction. Aquifer
schematization and properties of this groundwater model were developed
from available global lithological maps and datasets (Dürr et al.,
2005; Gleeson et al., 2010; Hartmann and Moosdorf, 2013), combined with
our estimate of aquifer thickness for sedimentary basins. We forced the
groundwater model with the output from the global hydrological model
PCR-GLOBWB (van Beek et al., 2011), specifically the net groundwater
recharge and average surface water levels derived from routed channel
discharge. For the parameterization, we relied entirely on available
global datasets and did not calibrate the model so that it can equally
be expanded to data poor environments. Based on our sensitivity
analysis, in which we run the model with various hydrogeological
parameter settings, we observed that most variance in groundwater depth
is explained by variation in saturated conductivity, and, for the
sediment basins, also by variation in recharge. We validated simulated
groundwater heads with piezometer heads (available from
www.glowasis.eu), resulting in a coefficient of determination for
sedimentary basins of 0.92 with regression constant of 0.8. This shows
the used method is suitable to build a global groundwater model using
best available global information, and estimated water table depths are
within acceptable accuracy in many parts of the world.
AB - As the world's largest accessible source of freshwater, groundwater
plays a vital role in satisfying the basic needs of human society. It
serves as a primary source of drinking water and supplies water for
agricultural and industrial activities. During times of drought,
groundwater storage provides a large natural buffer against water
shortage and sustains flows to rivers and wetlands, supporting ecosystem
habitats and biodiversity. Yet, the current generation of global scale
hydrological models (GHMs) do not include a groundwater flow component,
although it is a crucial part of the hydrological cycle. Thus, a
realistic physical representation of the groundwater system that allows
for the simulation of groundwater head dynamics and lateral flows is
essential for GHMs that increasingly run at finer resolution. In this
study we present a global groundwater model with a resolution of 5
arc-minutes (approximately 10 km at the equator) using MODFLOW (McDonald
and Harbaugh, 1988). With this global groundwater model we eventually
intend to simulate the changes in the groundwater system over time that
result from variations in recharge and abstraction. Aquifer
schematization and properties of this groundwater model were developed
from available global lithological maps and datasets (Dürr et al.,
2005; Gleeson et al., 2010; Hartmann and Moosdorf, 2013), combined with
our estimate of aquifer thickness for sedimentary basins. We forced the
groundwater model with the output from the global hydrological model
PCR-GLOBWB (van Beek et al., 2011), specifically the net groundwater
recharge and average surface water levels derived from routed channel
discharge. For the parameterization, we relied entirely on available
global datasets and did not calibrate the model so that it can equally
be expanded to data poor environments. Based on our sensitivity
analysis, in which we run the model with various hydrogeological
parameter settings, we observed that most variance in groundwater depth
is explained by variation in saturated conductivity, and, for the
sediment basins, also by variation in recharge. We validated simulated
groundwater heads with piezometer heads (available from
www.glowasis.eu), resulting in a coefficient of determination for
sedimentary basins of 0.92 with regression constant of 0.8. This shows
the used method is suitable to build a global groundwater model using
best available global information, and estimated water table depths are
within acceptable accuracy in many parts of the world.
M3 - Abstract
SP - 10283
ER -