Modeling of River-Aquifer Interactions: A Top-Down Approach
Date
2019
Authors
S, Harish Kumar
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Surathkal
Abstract
Surface water interacts with groundwater in many types of physiographic and hydrogeological conditions. The heterogeneity in hydrological processes over a catchment
affects the location, time and extent of interaction phenomenon. Exchange of water
varies spatially and temporally due to the effect of natural and anthropogenic factors.
It is essential to identify and quantify the surface water and groundwater (SW-GW)
exchange, since the quantity and quality of these resources affect each other. The SWGW interactions are characterized at various scales of flow systems such as regional,
intermediate and local scale. Driving forces influence the SW-GW exchange
depending upon different flow scales but the challenge of the present research is to
bring out its relevance. In the past, studies related to SW-GW interactions using
integrated models are not dealt in detail for smaller scales. Small-scale processes may
seem insignificant when accounted for a larger perspective of consideration.
Therefore, an effort is put to analyze the effect of driving forces on a larger scale and
a small scale in the present study. The objective of the present study is to investigate
the surface water and groundwater interactions at two different hydrological extents of
a catchment. The present study proposes a new approach based on the top-down
hierarchy from regional scale to sub-catchment scale to assess the SW-GW flux. For
the regional scale study, Nethravathi basin is chosen whereas for the intermediate
scale, sub-catchment of Gowri-hole, a tributary of Nethravathi River is considered. In
this study, river-aquifer interaction processes are simulated by using RIVER package
of MODFLOW for an unconfined aquifer system. A regional groundwater flow model
is built as a pre-requisite to identify the dynamic exchange occurring over the
catchment area using potentiometric maps and flow budgets. In the present study, a
MODFLOW-based regional groundwater model was simulated under steady-state
condition for a calibration period of 2004 - 2009 and validation period of 2010 - 2011.
The calibrated model was validated using the observed groundwater level data of 15
open wells measured by Department of Mines and Geology, Government of
Karnataka. The simulated regional groundwater model is in good agreement with
most of the wells reasonably matching the observed and computed groundwater
heads. It shows that the simulation of regional groundwater model is reasonable and
well suitable for the studies related to SW-GW interactions. In the present study,ii
intermediate scale model for the Gowri-hole sub-catchment was calibrated for
transient analysis from June 2004 - May 2010 with a daily step input. Automated
Parameter Estimation analysis was carried out to get better results from the study. The
calibrated model was validated from June 2010 - October 2012 for two monthly
observation wells of Department of Mines and Geology and one seasonal observation
well of Central Ground Water Board (CGWB). Groundwater heads gradually increase
from June - August with the arrival of monsoons and decline significantly from
September upto the month of May. Groundwater swelling is noticed near Well No. 3
of Bellare village in the month of October. River leakage decreases from 10 – 11 % in
June to 4 – 5 % in July with the commencement of peak monsoon flows. It steadily
increases from 12 – 14 % in September and continues to occur up to 41 – 42 % until
the end of May. Aquifer discharge increases from 24 – 25 % in June to 34 – 35 % in
July due to quick saturation during monsoon. From September, aquifer contribution
into the river flow significantly decreases upto 9 – 10 % in May. The contribution of
aquifer discharge into the river flow is consistent at the confluence points. Some parts
of river segments are under the influence of aquifer discharge. However, majority of
river segments are dominated by river leakage areas throughout the year.
Consequently, Gowri hole acts as a Gaining River during monsoons due to aquifer
discharge. And, it acts as Losing River due to river leakage throughout post-monsoon
and summer months. SW-GW interactions are driven by aquifer parameters such as
recharge rate and hydraulic conductivity. In the present study, these driving forces are
calculated for the simulation of both the regional scale and sub-catchment scale
groundwater flow model. During the calibration, the driving force values are adjusted
until the model is simulated with a good match between computed and observed
groundwater heads. The study identified that recharge rate is the driving factor
influencing the SW-GW interactions at regional scale and hydraulic conductivity is
the driving factor of sub-catchment scale SW-GW interactions.
Description
Keywords
Department of Applied Mechanics and Hydraulics, Surface water and groundwater interactions, Regional scale, Subcatchment scale, Groundwater flow model, River leakage, Aquifer discharge