scholarly journals The Exact Groundwater Divide on Water Table between Two Rivers: A Fundamental Model Investigation

Water ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 685 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peng-Fei Han ◽  
Xu-Sheng Wang ◽  
Li Wan ◽  
Xiao-Wei Jiang ◽  
Fu-Sheng Hu

The groundwater divide within a plane has long been delineated as a water table ridge composed of the local top points of a water table. This definition has not been examined well for river basins. We developed a fundamental model of a two-dimensional unsaturated–saturated flow in a profile between two rivers. The exact groundwater divide can be identified from the boundary between two local flow systems and compared with the top of a water table. It is closer to the river of a higher water level than the top of a water table. The catchment area would be overestimated (up to ~50%) for a high river and underestimated (up to ~15%) for a low river by using the top of the water table. Furthermore, a pass-through flow from one river to another would be developed below two local flow systems when the groundwater divide is significantly close to a high river.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Li Ruoyi ◽  
Wang Xu-Sheng ◽  
Han Peng-Fei

<p>Groundwater flow system has long been recognized as the local, intermediate and regional flow systems since Toth (1963). For groundwater flow in an unconfined aquifer between two parallel rivers (or ditches), as indicated by Hubbert (1940), there are two local flow systems contributing groundwater discharge to the two rivers from infiltration recharge. Surprisingly, this model has never been examined until Han et al. (2019) pointed out that something may be wrong: not only two flow systems exist. The problem was further investigated with a two-dimensional numerical model on MODFLOW for saturated groundwater flow below the arch-shape water table receiving a uniform infiltration recharge. Streamlines were obtained with MODPATH to identify the flow systems. We discovered that an abnormal groundwater flow system could emerge beneath the two local flow systems under some conditions, which forms a pass through flow from the high river to the low river. This pass-through flow system exists when the water level difference between the two rivers is sufficiently large and the infiltration recharge is sufficiently low. As a result, the base flow of the low river may be not only attributed to the captured infiltration recharge from the nearby local flow system but also partly originated from the high river. The ratio of the contribution from the pass-through flow system to the total groundwater discharge toward the low river could be higher than 20% and almost linearly increases with the water level difference between two rivers. More details of such an abnormal groundwater flow system were investigated as well.  </p>


1968 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 813-824 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. W. Lawson

An investigation of the groundwater flow systems associated with the most prominent topographic expression in the Okanagan Highland (a U-shaped valley) revealed that the hydraulic conductivity of the crystalline rock varies exponentially with depth, and that the local flow systems within the upper 125 to 150 ft of the crystalline rock conduct an estimated 10 to 17 Imperial gallons per day per foot thickness in a two-dimensional flow system. These local flow systems are quantitatively the most significant in the Okanagan Highland.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Onuchin ◽  
Т. Burenina ◽  
А. Shvidenko ◽  
D. Prysov ◽  
A. Musokhranova

Abstract Background Assessment of the reasons for the ambiguous influence of forests on the structure of the water balance is the subject of heated debate among forest hydrologists. Influencing the components of total evaporation, forest vegetation makes a significant contribution to the process of runoff formation, but this process has specific features in different geographical zones. The issues of the influence of forest vegetation on river runoff in the zonal aspect have not been sufficiently studied. Results Based on the analysis of the dependence of river runoff on forest cover, using the example of nine catchments located in the forest-tundra, northern and middle taiga of Northern Eurasia, it is shown that the share of forest cover in the total catchment area (percentage of forest cover, FCP) has different effects on runoff formation. Numerical experiments with the developed empirical models have shown that an increase in forest cover in the catchment area in northern latitudes contributes to an increase in runoff, while in the southern direction (in the middle taiga) extensive woody cover of catchments “works” to reduce runoff. The effectiveness of geographical zonality in regards to the influence of forests on runoff is more pronounced in the forest-tundra zone than in the zones of northern and middle taiga. Conclusion The study of this problem allowed us to analyze various aspects of the hydrological role of forests, and to show that forest ecosystems, depending on environmental conditions and the spatial distribution of forest cover, can transform water regimes in different ways. Despite the fact that the process of river runoff formation is controlled by many factors, such as temperature conditions, precipitation regime, geomorphology and the presence of permafrost, the models obtained allow us to reveal general trends in the dependence of the annual river runoff on the percentage of forest cover, at the level of catchments. The results obtained are consistent with the concept of geographic determinism, which explains the contradictions that exist in assessing the hydrological role of forests in various geographical and climatic conditions. The results of the study may serve as the basis for regulation of the forest cover of northern Eurasian river basins in order to obtain the desired hydrological effect depending on environmental and economic conditions.


Author(s):  
Yongde Kang ◽  
Miansong Huang ◽  
Jingming Hou ◽  
Yu Tong ◽  
Zhanpeng Pan

2019 ◽  
Vol 76 (1) ◽  
pp. 333-356 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Hannachi ◽  
W. Iqbal

Abstract Nonlinearity in the Northern Hemisphere’s wintertime atmospheric flow is investigated from both an intermediate-complexity model of the extratropics and reanalyses. A long simulation is obtained using a three-level quasigeostrophic model on the sphere. Kernel empirical orthogonal functions (EOFs), which help delineate complex structures, are used along with the local flow tendencies. Two fixed points are obtained, which are associated with strong bimodality in two-dimensional kernel principal component (PC) space, consistent with conceptual low-order dynamics. The regimes reflect zonal and blocked flows. The analysis is then extended to ERA-40 and JRA-55 using daily sea level pressure (SLP) and geopotential heights in the stratosphere (20 hPa) and troposphere (500 hPa). In the stratosphere, trimodality is obtained, representing disturbed, displaced, and undisturbed states of the winter polar vortex. In the troposphere, the probability density functions (PDFs), for both fields, within the two-dimensional (2D) kernel EOF space are strongly bimodal. The modes correspond broadly to opposite phases of the Arctic Oscillation with a signature of the negative North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO). Over the North Atlantic–European sector, a trimodal PDF is also obtained with two strong and one weak modes. The strong modes are associated, respectively, with the north (or +NAO) and south (or −NAO) positions of the eddy-driven jet stream. The third weak mode is interpreted as a transition path between the two positions. A climate change signal is also observed in the troposphere of the winter hemisphere, resulting in an increase (a decrease) in the frequency of the polar high (low), consistent with an increase of zonal flow frequency.


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