MODFLOW 6 model of two hypothetical stream-aquifer systems to demonstrate the utility of the new Water Mover Package (MVR) available only with MODFLOW 6
Two MODFLOW 6 (version 6.2.1) models of hypothetical stream-aquifer systems are presented for the
demonstration and utility of the Water Mover (MVR) Package available only with MODFLOW 6. Using
a generalized approach, MVR facilitates the transfer of water among many arbitrary combinations of
simulated features (i.e., pumping wells, stream, drains, lakes, etc.) within a MODFLOW 6 simulation.
In this archive, the nature of the two hypothetical models are (1) simple ("model1" in the model.zip file)
and complex ("model2" in the model.zip file). "Model1" relies on a previously published parent-child
nested grid simulation (see "example 3" on page 30 at https://pubs.usgs.gov/tm/6a44/) that has been
refactored for MODFLOW 6. In the accompanying journal article, this model is described in the
supplemental material. The child model resolves the parent model grid cells with 27 (3x3x3) additional
cells. Model1 uses only two MVR connections to pass water (1) from a streamflow routing (SFR) reach
in a parent model to an SFR reach in a child model and (2) from an SFR reach in the child model back
to an SFR reach in the parent model. The complex model has 64 rows, 133 columns, and 4 layers and
is patterned after an irrigated river valley in the semi-arid western U.S. "Model2" first appeared in the
journal article, https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S136481521630113X. In the journal
article accompanying this data release "model2" is discussed in the section titled "A Mock Irrigated
River Valley". The model demonstrates the general flexibility of the MVR package so readers can get
a sense how MODFLOW 6 may be tailored to complex water-management problems in conjunctive-use
systems. To this end, thousands of MVR connections are present with every stress period. The complex
model simulates a hypothetical water-year and therefore relies on 366 transient (daily) stress periods
after the initial steady-state stress period. The transient period of the model extends from an arbitrary
October 1st to the following September 30th. The complex model includes a river, 4 main diversion
ditches, and numerous tributaries, many of which are open drains representative of irrigation return
flows. All these features are represented with the streamflow routing (SFR) package. The simulation
also includes a reservoir represented with the Lake (LAK) package. Rainfall and evapotranspiration
are simulated with the unsaturated-zone flow (UZF) package. Water transfers between packages
are handled by the MVR package. This USGS data release contains all the input and output files
for the simulations described in the associated journal article. (https://doi.org/10.1111/gwat.13117)
Complete Metadata
| @id | http://datainventory.doi.gov/id/dataset/583b30660d9dfc5f0725a507330932aa |
|---|---|
| bureauCode |
[ "010:12" ] |
| identifier | USGS:05ea112a-cacd-492a-8fc6-84a3217c3e3f |
| spatial | -119.699486,39.182563,-119.697922,39.184008 |
| theme |
[ "geospatial" ] |