TY - CONF
T1 - Global scale groundwater flow model
AU - Sutanudjaja, Edwin
AU - de Graaf, Inge
AU - van Beek, Rens
AU - Bierkens, Marinus
PY - 2013/4/1
Y1 - 2013/4/1
N2 - As the world's largest accessible source of freshwater, groundwater
plays 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 sustains water flows in streams, rivers, lakes and wetlands,
and thus supports ecosystem habitat and biodiversity, while its large
natural storage provides a buffer against water shortages. Yet, the
current generation of global scale hydrological models does not include
a groundwater flow component that is a crucial part of the hydrological
cycle and allows the simulation of groundwater head dynamics. In this
study we present a steady-state MODFLOW (McDonald and Harbaugh, 1988)
groundwater model on the global scale at 5 arc-minutes resolution.
Aquifer schematization and properties of this groundwater model were
developed from available global lithological model (e.g. Dürr et
al., 2005; Gleeson et al., 2010; Hartmann and Moorsdorff, in press). We
force the groundwtaer model with the output from the large-scale
hydrological model PCR-GLOBWB (van Beek et al., 2011), specifically the
long term net groundwater recharge and average surface water levels
derived from routed channel discharge. We validated calculated
groundwater heads and depths with available head observations, from
different regions, including the North and South America and Western
Europe. Our results show that it is feasible to build a relatively
simple global scale groundwater model using existing information, and
estimate water table depths within acceptable accuracy in many parts of
the world.
AB - As the world's largest accessible source of freshwater, groundwater
plays 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 sustains water flows in streams, rivers, lakes and wetlands,
and thus supports ecosystem habitat and biodiversity, while its large
natural storage provides a buffer against water shortages. Yet, the
current generation of global scale hydrological models does not include
a groundwater flow component that is a crucial part of the hydrological
cycle and allows the simulation of groundwater head dynamics. In this
study we present a steady-state MODFLOW (McDonald and Harbaugh, 1988)
groundwater model on the global scale at 5 arc-minutes resolution.
Aquifer schematization and properties of this groundwater model were
developed from available global lithological model (e.g. Dürr et
al., 2005; Gleeson et al., 2010; Hartmann and Moorsdorff, in press). We
force the groundwtaer model with the output from the large-scale
hydrological model PCR-GLOBWB (van Beek et al., 2011), specifically the
long term net groundwater recharge and average surface water levels
derived from routed channel discharge. We validated calculated
groundwater heads and depths with available head observations, from
different regions, including the North and South America and Western
Europe. Our results show that it is feasible to build a relatively
simple global scale groundwater model using existing information, and
estimate water table depths within acceptable accuracy in many parts of
the world.
M3 - Abstract
ER -