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MODFLOW-2005 model used to evaluate water-management scenarios for the Mississippi Delta
A three-dimensional groundwater flow model (MODFLOW-2005) of the Mississippi embayment,
South-Central United States, was developed as part of a national project initiated by the U.S.
Geological Survey Groundwater Resources Program to provide updated assessments of
groundwater availability in important principal aquifers across the United States. The goals
of the national assessment are to document effects of human activities on water levels and
groundwater storage, explore climate variability effects on the regional water budget, and
evaluate the adequacy of data networks at a regional scale. The Mississippi embayment
was chosen because of the substantial dependency on groundwater for agriculture and
municipal needs.
Since the development of the original Mississippi Embayment Regional Aquifer system
(MERAS) model in 2009, the model has been updated and enhanced and is proving an
invaluable tool to evaluate and develop water management pumping strategies. The
construction and calibration of the original model (MERAS 1.0) is documented in the
U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Scientific Investigations Report 2009-5172
(https://doi.org/10.3133/sir20095172). MERAS 1.0 contains one transient simulation
that quantifies the groundwater availability in the aquifer system from January 1870 to
April 2007. The USGS Professional Paper 1785 (https://doi.org/10.3133/pp1785)
describes the historical background of the hydrologic system, analyses of the transient
water budget, effects of climate change on the groundwater system, and evaluation of the
groundwater monitoring network. Minor modifications were done to the model to improve
the simulation of groundwater flow (MERAS 1.1) and two climate scenarios were completed
using this model. USGS Scientific Investigations Report 2013-5161
(https://doi.org/10.3133/sir20135161) investigated ways to improve the match of observed
to simulated groundwater levels within the Mississippi River Valley alluvial and middle
Claiborne (Sparta) aquifers. The model was updated with improved water-use estimates
and refined parameter estimation by using pilot points (MERAS 2.0). Three water-supply
scenarios considered by the State of Arkansas were completed with the MERAS 2.0 model.
To assess proposed alternative water-supply scenarios and their impact on future water-supply
in the Mississippi Delta, the USGS and the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality
collaborated to update and enhance the MERAS 2.0 model. The MERAS 2.0 model has been
updated to April 2014 with the most recent water-use data, precipitation and recharge data,
and streamflow and water-level observation data to make MERAS version 2.1
(https://doi.org/10.3133/sir20195116). Five different water-supply options (with a total of 22
sub-scenarios) are run using the MERAS 2.1 model and include: irrigation efficiency, on-farm
storage and tailwater recovery, weirs for surface-water augmentation, surface-water transfer,
and groundwater transfer and injection. All scenarios are compared with a base scenario
which provides a standard for the alternate water-management scenarios. This USGS data
release contains all of the input and output files for the simulation of these water-supply
option using the new MERAS 2.1 model described in the associated model documentation
report (https://doi.org/10.3133/sir20195116).
Complete Metadata
| @id | http://datainventory.doi.gov/id/dataset/e4bdca98f33fcb269212647b0ca39e3e |
|---|---|
| bureauCode |
[ "010:12" ] |
| identifier | USGS:d6ae85bd-6e66-4d2a-b990-33eee484fda5 |
| spatial | -94.114588,31.192468,-86.753673,37.465044 |
| theme |
[ "geospatial" ] |