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MODFLOW-NWT model used to evaluate groundwater withdrawal scenarios for the Rush Springs aquifer upgradient from the Fort Cobb Reservoir, western Oklahoma, 1979-2015, including streamflow, base flow, and precipitation statistics

Dates

Publication Date
Start Date
1979-01-01
End Date
2015-12-31

Citation

Trevisan, A.R., Labriola, L.G., and Ellis, J.H., 2024, MODFLOW-NWT model used to evaluate groundwater withdrawal scenarios for the Rush Springs aquifer upgradient from the Fort Cobb Reservoir, western Oklahoma, 1979-2015, including streamflow, base flow, and precipitation statistics: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P9K413D1.

Summary

A previously published MODFLOW-NWT groundwater-flow model for the Rush Springs aquifer in western Oklahoma (using 1 steady state stress period followed by 444 monthly stress periods representing 1979-2015; Ellis, 2018a) was used as the basis of several groundwater-use scenarios. The model is a 3-layer model including the Cloud Chief formation (confining unit of the Rush Springs aquifer), alluvial and terrace deposits, and the Rush Springs aquifer. The scenarios were used to assess the effects of increasing groundwater withdrawals from the Rush Springs aquifer on base flows to streams that flow into Fort Cobb Reservoir to address concerns over groundwater use reducing inflows to the lake. The effects of groundwater use on base flow [...]

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bin.zip 239.39 MB application/zip
source.zip 272.56 MB application/zip
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SIR-2024-5002_thumbnail.jpg thumbnail 479.12 KB image/jpeg
georef.zip 164.75 KB application/zip
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ancillary.zip 13.59 MB application/zip
readme.txt 81 KB text/plain

Purpose

A previously published model (Ellis, 2018a) was used to simulated the effects of changes in groundwater withdrawals on base flows in streams upgradient from the Fort Cobb Reservoir (Cobb Creek, Lake Creek, and Willow Creek) in several scaled-groundwater-withdrawal scenarios to address concerned with the ability of the Rush Springs aquifer to sustain increasing groundwater demand without decreasing base-flows to streams that supply surface-water to the Fort Cobb Reservoir.

Additional Information

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DOI https://www.sciencebase.gov/vocab/category/item/identifier doi:10.5066/P9K413D1

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