| USGS Series |
Water-Resources Investigations Report |
| Report Number |
99-4212 |
| Title |
Numerical simulation of vertical ground-water flux of the Rio Grande from ground-water temperature profiles, central New Mexico |
| Edition |
- |
| Language |
ENGLISH |
| Author(s) |
Bartolino, James R.; Niswonger, Richard G. |
| Year |
1999 |
| Originating office |
|
| USGS Library Call Number |
(200) WRi no. 99-4212 |
| Physical description |
iv, 34 p. :ill., map ;28 cm. |
| ISBN |
|
Currently not available through the USGS Store
Abstract
An important gap in the understanding of the hydrology of the
Middle Rio Grande Basin, central New Mexico, is the rate at
which water from the Rio Grande recharges the Santa Fe Group
aquifer system. Several methodologies-including use of the
Glover-Balmer equation, flood pulses, and channel permeameters-
have been applied to this problem in the Middle Rio Grande
Basin. In the work presented here, ground-water temperature
profiles and ground-water levels beneath the Rio Grande were
measured and numerically simulated at four sites. The direction
and rate of vertical ground-water flux between the river and
underlying aquifer was simulated and the effective vertical
hydraulic conductivity of the sediments underlying the river was
estimated through model calibration.
Seven sets of nested piezometers were installed during July and
August 1996 at four sites along the Rio Grande in the
Albuquerque area, though only four of the piezometer nests were
simulated. In downstream order, these four sites are (1) the
Bernalillo site, upstream from the New Mexico State Highway 44
bridge in Bernalillo (piezometer nest BRN02); (2) the Corrales
site, upstream from the Rio Rancho sewage treatment plant in Rio
Rancho (COR01); (3) the Paseo del Norte site, upstream from the
Paseo del Norte bridge in Albuquerque (PDN01); and (4) the Rio
Bravo site, upstream from the Rio Bravo bridge in Albuquerque
(RBR01). All piezometers were completed in the inner-valley
alluvium of the Santa Fe Group aquifer system. Ground-water
levels and temperatures were measured in the four piezometer
nests a total of seven times in the 24-month period from
September 1996 through August 1998.
The flux between the surface- and ground-water systems at each
of the field sites was quantified by one-dimensional numerical
simulation of the water and heat exchange in the subsurface
using the heat and water transport model VS2DH. Model
calibration was aided by the use of PEST, a model-independent
computer program that uses nonlinear parameter estimation.
Mean vertical hydraulic conductivities were estimated by model
calibration and range from 1.5x10-5 to 5.8x10-6 meters per
second (m/s). Mean simulated vertical ground-water flux for the
BRN02 piezometer nest is 3.30x10-7 m/s; for the COR01 piezometer
nest is 3.58x10-7 m/s; for the PDN01 piezometer nest is 4.22x10-
7 m/s; and for the RBR01 piezometer nest is 2.05x10-7 m/s.
Comparison of the simulated vertical fluxes and vertical
hydraulic conductivities derived from this study with values
from other studies in the Middle Rio Grande Basin indicate
agreement between 1 and 3.5 orders of magnitude for hydraulic
conductivity and within 1 order of magnitude for vertical flux.