• Title/Summary/Keyword: Channel-Aquifer Interaction

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Analysis of Temporal and Spatial Variations of Channel-Aquifer Interaction Using a Distributed Catchment Model: A Case Study for the Tarland Burn Catchment in the UK (분포형 유역 모델을 이용한 하천-지하수 상호작용의 시공간적 변동 해석: 영국 Tarland Burn 유역에 대한 사례 연구)

  • Koo, Bhon-Kyoung
    • Proceedings of the Korea Water Resources Association Conference
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    • 2007.05a
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    • pp.253-257
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    • 2007
  • Channel-aquifer interaction is one of the key hydrological processes that determine water flows in the stream/river channel. Field measurements of channel-aquifer interaction, however, is very difficult and costly, particularly when one intends to understand its variations across a catchment for a long period. Hydrological simulations using a catchment model are a relatively easier and cheaper alternative provided the model structure is appropriate for describing channel-aquifer interaction. In this study, a catchment model called CAMEL (Chemicals from Agricultural Management and Erosion Losses) is used for estimating channel-aquifer interaction over time and space. CAMEL is a distributed catchment model to simulate transformation and transport processes of sediment and pollutants as well as water flows at the catchment scale. In the model, a catchment is represented using a network of square columns each of which is comprised of various storages of water. CAMEL explicitly simulates both surface and subsurface processes including channel-aquifer interaction. This paper presents an application study results of CAMEL for the Tarland Burn Catchment, a small (catchment area $52\;km^2$) rural catchment in Scotland, UK, demonstrating some of the channel-aquifer interaction dynamics across the catchment during a 2-year period.

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An Integrated Surface Water-Groundwater Modeling by Using Fully Combined SWAT MODFLOW Model (완전연동형 SWAT-MODFLOW 모형을 이용한 지표수-지하수 통합 유출모의)

  • Kim, Nam Won;Chung, Il Moon;Won, Yoo Seung
    • KSCE Journal of Civil and Environmental Engineering Research
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    • v.26 no.5B
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    • pp.481-488
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    • 2006
  • This paper suggests a novel approach of integrating the quasi-distributed watershed model SWAT with the fully-distributed groundwater model MODFLOW. Since the SWAT model has semi distributed features, its groundwater components hardly considers distributed parameters such as hydraulic conductivity and storage coefficient. Generating a detailed representation of groundwater recharge, head distribution and pumping rate is equally difficult. To solve these problems, the method of exchanging the characteristics of the hydrologic response units (HRUs) in SWAT with cells in MODFLOW by fully combined manner is proposed. The linkage is completed by considering the interaction between the stream network and the aquifer to reflect boundary flow. This approach is provisionally applied to Gyungancheon basin in Korea. The application demonstrates a combined model which enables an interaction between saturated zones and channel reaches. This interaction plays an essential role in the runoff generation in the Gyungancheon basin. The comprehensive results show a wide applicability of the model which represents the temporal-spatial groundwater head distribution and recharge.