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GroMoPo Metadata for Region O Texas-New Mexico MODFLOW model


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Created: Feb 08, 2023 at 2:19 p.m.
Last updated: Feb 08, 2023 at 2:19 p.m.
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Abstract

Recent legislation required regional grassroots water resources planning across the entire state of Texas. The. Texas Water Development Board (TWDB), the state's primary water resource planning agency, divided the state into 16 planning regions. Each planning group developed plans to manage both ground water and surface water sources and to meet future demands of various combinations of domestic, agricultural, municipal, and industrial water consumers. This presentation describes the challenges in developing a ground water model for the Llano Estacado Regional Water Planning Group (LERWPG), whose region includes 21 counties in the Southern High Plains of Texas. While surface water is supplied to several cities in this region, the vast majority of the regional water use comes from the High Plains aquifer system, often locally referred to as the Ogallala Aquifer. Over 95% of the ground water demand is for irrigated agriculture. The LERWPG had to predict the impact of future TWDB-projected water demands, as provided by the TWDB, on the aquifer for the period 2000 to 2050. If detrimental impacts were noted, alternative management strategies must be proposed. While much effort was spent on evaluating the current status of the ground water reserves, an appropriate numerical model of the aquifer system was necessary to demonstrate future impacts of the predicted withdrawals as well as the effects of the alternative strategies. The modeling effort was completed in the summer of 2000. This presentation concentrates on the political, scientific, and nontechnical issues in this planning process that complicated the modeling effort. Uncertainties in data, most significantly in distribution and intensity of recharge and withdrawals, significantly impacted the calibration and predictive modeling efforts. Four predictive scenarios, including baseline projections, recurrence of the drought of record, precipitation enhancement, and reduced irrigation demand, were simulated to identify counties at risk of low final ground water storage volume or low levels of satisfied demand by 2050.

Subject Keywords

Coverage

Spatial

Coordinate System/Geographic Projection:
WGS 84 EPSG:4326
Coordinate Units:
Decimal degrees
Place/Area Name:
United States
North Latitude
35.3224°
East Longitude
-100.9368°
South Latitude
31.7768°
West Longitude
-104.1414°

Content

Additional Metadata

Name Value
DOI 10.1111/j.1745-6584.2005.00068.x
Depth
Scale >100 000 km²
Layers
Purpose Groundwater resources;Decision support
GroMoPo_ID 263
IsVerified True
Model Code MODFLOW;Groundwater Vistas
Model Link https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1745-6584.2005.00068.x
Model Time 1985-1995
Model Year 2005
Model Authors Rainwater, K; Stovall, J; Frailey, S; Urban, L
Model Country United States
Data Available Report/paper only
Developer Email NA
Dominant Geology Unsure
Developer Country USA
Publication Title Transboundary impacts on regional ground water modeling-in Texas
Original Developer No
Additional Information Study highlighting the challenges of groundwater models crossing state and regulatory boundaries in West Texas and Eastern New Mexico, USA
Integration or Coupling None of the above
Evaluation or Calibration Static water levels
Geologic Data Availability No

How to Cite

GroMoPo, K. Compare (2023). GroMoPo Metadata for Region O Texas-New Mexico MODFLOW model, HydroShare, http://www.hydroshare.org/resource/523bbbb154a543c59a012ef3ee8d1ef5

This resource is shared under the Creative Commons Attribution CC BY.

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
CC-BY

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