Estimating Watershed Subsurface Permeability From Stream Discharge Data Using Deep Neural Networks

Subsurface permeability is a key parameter in watershed models that controls the contribution from the subsurface flow to stream flows. Since the permeability is difficult and expensive to measure directly at the spatial extent and resolution required by fully distributed watershed models, estimatio...

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Main Authors: Erol Cromwell, Pin Shuai, Peishi Jiang, Ethan T. Coon, Scott L. Painter, J. David Moulton, Youzuo Lin, Xingyuan Chen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-02-01
Series:Frontiers in Earth Science
Subjects:
DNN
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/feart.2021.613011/full
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spelling doaj-cc72e22359d2469bb90f70bb68046bf32021-02-08T04:39:47ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Earth Science2296-64632021-02-01910.3389/feart.2021.613011613011Estimating Watershed Subsurface Permeability From Stream Discharge Data Using Deep Neural NetworksErol Cromwell0Pin Shuai1Peishi Jiang2Ethan T. Coon3Scott L. Painter4J. David Moulton5Youzuo Lin6Xingyuan Chen7Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (DOE), Department of Energy National Laboratories, Department of Energy’s Office of Science, Richland, WA, United StatesPacific Northwest National Laboratory (DOE), Department of Energy National Laboratories, Department of Energy’s Office of Science, Richland, WA, United StatesPacific Northwest National Laboratory (DOE), Department of Energy National Laboratories, Department of Energy’s Office of Science, Richland, WA, United StatesOak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN, United StatesOak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN, United StatesLos Alamos National Laboratory (DOE), Department of Energy National Laboratories, Los Alamos, NM, United StatesLos Alamos National Laboratory (DOE), Department of Energy National Laboratories, Los Alamos, NM, United StatesPacific Northwest National Laboratory (DOE), Department of Energy National Laboratories, Department of Energy’s Office of Science, Richland, WA, United StatesSubsurface permeability is a key parameter in watershed models that controls the contribution from the subsurface flow to stream flows. Since the permeability is difficult and expensive to measure directly at the spatial extent and resolution required by fully distributed watershed models, estimation through inverse modeling has had a long history in subsurface hydrology. The wide availability of stream surface flow data, compared to groundwater monitoring data, provides a new data source to infer soil and geologic properties using integrated surface and subsurface hydrologic models. As most of the existing methods have shown difficulty in dealing with highly nonlinear inverse problems, we explore the use of deep neural networks for inversion owing to their successes in mapping complex, highly nonlinear relationships. We train various deep neural network (DNN) models with different architectures to predict subsurface permeability from stream discharge hydrograph at the watershed outlet. The training data are obtained from ensemble simulations of hydrographs corresponding to an permeability ensemble using a fully-distributed, integrated surface-subsurface hydrologic model. The trained model is then applied to estimate the permeability of the real watershed using its observed hydrograph at the outlet. Our study demonstrates that the permeabilities of the soil and geologic facies that make significant contributions to the outlet discharge can be more accurately estimated from the discharge data. Their estimations are also more robust with observation errors. Compared to the traditional ensemble smoother method, DNNs show stronger performance in capturing the nonlinear relationship between permeability and stream hydrograph to accurately estimate permeability. Our study sheds new light on the value of the emerging deep learning methods in assisting integrated watershed modeling by improving parameter estimation, which will eventually reduce the uncertainty in predictive watershed models.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/feart.2021.613011/fullDNNmachine learninginverse modelingsubsurface permeabilitystream discharge
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Erol Cromwell
Pin Shuai
Peishi Jiang
Ethan T. Coon
Scott L. Painter
J. David Moulton
Youzuo Lin
Xingyuan Chen
spellingShingle Erol Cromwell
Pin Shuai
Peishi Jiang
Ethan T. Coon
Scott L. Painter
J. David Moulton
Youzuo Lin
Xingyuan Chen
Estimating Watershed Subsurface Permeability From Stream Discharge Data Using Deep Neural Networks
Frontiers in Earth Science
DNN
machine learning
inverse modeling
subsurface permeability
stream discharge
author_facet Erol Cromwell
Pin Shuai
Peishi Jiang
Ethan T. Coon
Scott L. Painter
J. David Moulton
Youzuo Lin
Xingyuan Chen
author_sort Erol Cromwell
title Estimating Watershed Subsurface Permeability From Stream Discharge Data Using Deep Neural Networks
title_short Estimating Watershed Subsurface Permeability From Stream Discharge Data Using Deep Neural Networks
title_full Estimating Watershed Subsurface Permeability From Stream Discharge Data Using Deep Neural Networks
title_fullStr Estimating Watershed Subsurface Permeability From Stream Discharge Data Using Deep Neural Networks
title_full_unstemmed Estimating Watershed Subsurface Permeability From Stream Discharge Data Using Deep Neural Networks
title_sort estimating watershed subsurface permeability from stream discharge data using deep neural networks
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Earth Science
issn 2296-6463
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Subsurface permeability is a key parameter in watershed models that controls the contribution from the subsurface flow to stream flows. Since the permeability is difficult and expensive to measure directly at the spatial extent and resolution required by fully distributed watershed models, estimation through inverse modeling has had a long history in subsurface hydrology. The wide availability of stream surface flow data, compared to groundwater monitoring data, provides a new data source to infer soil and geologic properties using integrated surface and subsurface hydrologic models. As most of the existing methods have shown difficulty in dealing with highly nonlinear inverse problems, we explore the use of deep neural networks for inversion owing to their successes in mapping complex, highly nonlinear relationships. We train various deep neural network (DNN) models with different architectures to predict subsurface permeability from stream discharge hydrograph at the watershed outlet. The training data are obtained from ensemble simulations of hydrographs corresponding to an permeability ensemble using a fully-distributed, integrated surface-subsurface hydrologic model. The trained model is then applied to estimate the permeability of the real watershed using its observed hydrograph at the outlet. Our study demonstrates that the permeabilities of the soil and geologic facies that make significant contributions to the outlet discharge can be more accurately estimated from the discharge data. Their estimations are also more robust with observation errors. Compared to the traditional ensemble smoother method, DNNs show stronger performance in capturing the nonlinear relationship between permeability and stream hydrograph to accurately estimate permeability. Our study sheds new light on the value of the emerging deep learning methods in assisting integrated watershed modeling by improving parameter estimation, which will eventually reduce the uncertainty in predictive watershed models.
topic DNN
machine learning
inverse modeling
subsurface permeability
stream discharge
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/feart.2021.613011/full
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