MODFLOW-NWT model data sets for simulating effects of groundwater withdrawals on streamflows in Northwestern Chippewa County
A new groundwater flow model for western Chippewa County, Wisconsin has been developed
by the Wisconsin Geological and Natural History Survey (WGNHS) and the U.S. Geological
Survey (USGS). An analytic element GFLOW model was constructed and calibrated to
generate hydraulic boundary conditions for the perimeter of the more detailed
three-dimensional MODFLOW-NWT model. This three-dimensional model uses the USGS
MODFLOW-NWT finite difference code, a standalone version of MODFLOW-2005 that
incorporates the Newton (NWT) solver. The model conceptualizes the hydrogeology of western
Chippewa County as a six-layer system which includes several hydrostratigraphic units. The
model explicitly simulates groundwater-surface-water interaction with streamflow routing. Model
input included recent estimates of aquifer hydraulic conductivities and a spatial groundwater
recharge distribution developed using a GIS-based soil-water-balance model for the study
area. Groundwater withdrawals from pumping were simulated for 269 high-capacity wells
across the entire model domain, which includes western Chippewa County and portions of
eastern Dunn County and southeastern Barron County. Model calibration used the parameter
estimation code PEST, and calibration targets included heads and stream flows. Calibration f
focused on the period from during 2011 to 2013 when the largest amount of calibration data
were available. Following calibration, the model was applied to two distinct scenarios; one
evaluating hydraulic impacts of more intensive industrial sand mining and the second evaluating
the hydraulicimpacts of more intensive agricultural irrigation practices. Each scenario was
developed with input by Chippewa County and a stakeholder group established for this study,
and designed to represent reasonable future build-out conditions for both mining and
irrigatedagriculture. The mining scenario underscores the potential hydraulic impacts related to
changing land-use practices (i.e., hilltops and farm land becoming sand mines), while the
irrigated agriculture scenario illustrates the potential hydraulic impacts of intensifying existing
land-use practices (i.e., installing new wells to irrigate farm fields).
Complete Metadata
| bureauCode |
[ "010:12" ] |
|---|---|
| identifier | http://datainventory.doi.gov/id/dataset/USGS_504e59f7-883b-42e9-81fe-4cd4001ce557 |
| spatial | -91.74356, 44.871185, -91.265762, 45.370969 |
| theme |
[ "geospatial" ] |