Simulation of ground water recharge and movement in alluvial aquifers on the Black Mesa

Alluvial aquifers associated with ephemeral washes on the Black Mesa of Arizona are an undeveloped and somewhat overlooked water resource in an arid region. A model is developed to simulate conditions on such a stream-aquifer system in order to evaluate characteristics in the natural state, as well...

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Main Author: Blevins, Dale Wayne.
Other Authors: Fogel, Martin M.
Language:en
Published: The University of Arizona. 1978
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/191677
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-1916772015-10-23T04:37:37Z Simulation of ground water recharge and movement in alluvial aquifers on the Black Mesa Blevins, Dale Wayne. Fogel, Martin M. Alluvial aquifers associated with ephemeral washes on the Black Mesa of Arizona are an undeveloped and somewhat overlooked water resource in an arid region. A model is developed to simulate conditions on such a stream-aquifer system in order to evaluate characteristics in the natural state, as well as evaluate the effects of a strip mining operation on the watershed and through parts of the aquifer. The model generates precipitation stochastically on an event basis. Storms are considered convective, and duration and areal distributions are calculated. The watershed model computes hydrographs from rainfall on several subwatersheds and routes and adds these outputs in the correct sequence to determine total hydrographs at selected cross- sections. Runoff is determined through use of SCS curve numbers. Recharge is modeled by the Green and Ampt infiltration formula and a one dimensional form of the differential ground water equation. A ground water model then determines head fluctuations between recharge events. Three runs simulating natural, actual post-mining, and hypothetical post-mining conditions show few adverse effects to the streamaquifer system if large portions of the aquifer are not overturned. Examination of the natural conditions shows evapotranspiration dominating drainage losses from the alluvial aquifer. 1978 Thesis-Reproduction (electronic) text http://hdl.handle.net/10150/191677 212780618 en Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
description Alluvial aquifers associated with ephemeral washes on the Black Mesa of Arizona are an undeveloped and somewhat overlooked water resource in an arid region. A model is developed to simulate conditions on such a stream-aquifer system in order to evaluate characteristics in the natural state, as well as evaluate the effects of a strip mining operation on the watershed and through parts of the aquifer. The model generates precipitation stochastically on an event basis. Storms are considered convective, and duration and areal distributions are calculated. The watershed model computes hydrographs from rainfall on several subwatersheds and routes and adds these outputs in the correct sequence to determine total hydrographs at selected cross- sections. Runoff is determined through use of SCS curve numbers. Recharge is modeled by the Green and Ampt infiltration formula and a one dimensional form of the differential ground water equation. A ground water model then determines head fluctuations between recharge events. Three runs simulating natural, actual post-mining, and hypothetical post-mining conditions show few adverse effects to the streamaquifer system if large portions of the aquifer are not overturned. Examination of the natural conditions shows evapotranspiration dominating drainage losses from the alluvial aquifer.
author2 Fogel, Martin M.
author_facet Fogel, Martin M.
Blevins, Dale Wayne.
author Blevins, Dale Wayne.
spellingShingle Blevins, Dale Wayne.
Simulation of ground water recharge and movement in alluvial aquifers on the Black Mesa
author_sort Blevins, Dale Wayne.
title Simulation of ground water recharge and movement in alluvial aquifers on the Black Mesa
title_short Simulation of ground water recharge and movement in alluvial aquifers on the Black Mesa
title_full Simulation of ground water recharge and movement in alluvial aquifers on the Black Mesa
title_fullStr Simulation of ground water recharge and movement in alluvial aquifers on the Black Mesa
title_full_unstemmed Simulation of ground water recharge and movement in alluvial aquifers on the Black Mesa
title_sort simulation of ground water recharge and movement in alluvial aquifers on the black mesa
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 1978
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/191677
work_keys_str_mv AT blevinsdalewayne simulationofgroundwaterrechargeandmovementinalluvialaquifersontheblackmesa
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