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Simulation of Ground-Water Flow in the Shenandoah Valley, Virginia and West Virginia, Using Variable-Direction Anisotropy in Hydraulic Conductivity to Represent Bedrock Structure

Dates

Year
2008

Citation

Yager, Richard M, Southworth, Scott C, and Voss, Clifford I, 2008, Simulation of Ground-Water Flow in the Shenandoah Valley, Virginia and West Virginia, Using Variable-Direction Anisotropy in Hydraulic Conductivity to Represent Bedrock Structure: U.S. Geological Survey.

Summary

Ground-water flow was simulated using variable-direction anisotropy in hydraulic conductivity to represent the folded, fractured sedimentary rocks that underlie the Shenandoah Valley in Virginia and West Virginia. The anisotropy is a consequence of the orientations of fractures that provide preferential flow paths through the rock, such that the direction of maximum hydraulic conductivity is oriented within bedding planes, which generally strike N30 deg E; the direction of minimum hydraulic conductivity is perpendicular to the bedding. The finite-element model SUTRA was used to specify variable directions of the hydraulic-conductivity tensor in order to represent changes in the strike and dip of the bedding throughout the valley. The [...]

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  • USGS National Research Program

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Added to ScienceBase on Tue Apr 23 15:32:35 MDT 2013 by processing file <b>Investigations of Single and Multiphase Fluid Flow, Mass and Energy Transport, and Fluid Phase Change in the Subsurface Environment (Voss).xml</b> in item <a href="https://www.sciencebase.gov/catalog/item/504216b8e4b04b508bfd3351">https://www.sciencebase.gov/catalog/item/504216b8e4b04b508bfd3351</a>

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Report Number http://sciencebase.gov/vocab/identifierScheme SIR - 2008-5002

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