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Title GeoLinkage2.0 and GeoChecker: Hydroinformatics Tools for Large and Complex Hydrological-Hydrogeological Models using WEAP- MODFLOW. Case Study: Severe Drought in the LimarĂ­ River Basin, Chile
Authors Pedro Sanzana, Antonio Torga, Nancy Hitschfeld, Claudio Lobos
Publication date 2025
Abstract Understanding and modeling surface and groundwater
resources are
critical due to the effects of
droughts and climate change, especially in semi-arid, arid, or hyper-arid
regions. GeoLinkage,
developed by Troncoso (2021), facilitates the creation of linkage files for
integrated models. These
linkage shapefiles act as a communication interface between a surface
hydrological domain (D1)
and an aquifer domain (D2). The surface domain (D1) comprises nodes and arcs
that represent
hydrological elements and their relationships, while the aquifer domain (D2)
contains geometric
elements such as grids or Quadtree diagrams. D1 defines a surface topology
(tau1), D2 defines a
groundwater topology (tau2), and the linkage file establishes a
surface-groundwater topology (tau1-2).
This new topology, tau1-2 ,imposes constraints that influence the
relationship between tau1 and tau2. For
instance, the superposition of elements in tau1-2 should be considered a
spatial relationship.
Depending on the type of superposed elements, this relationship must be
reflected in tau1 or tau2. To
enforce these tau1-2 specific restrictions, GeoLinkage has been enhanced with
a post-processing
module called GeoChecker. This module evaluates the quality of the resulting
linkage files.
GeoChecker currently performs a superposition check to ensure that overlaps
between cells in the
linkage file--whether between groundwater and catchments or groundwater and
demand
sites--are accurately represented as connections in the surface model
(WEAP). The aquifer is
represented by a MODFLOW model fully linked to the WEAP model. GeoLinkage2.0
and
GeoChecker were developed using the tutorial WEAP-MODFLOW model, considered
a small
model, and were tested in large integrated models, such as the Azapa Valley
(3,000 km2) and the
LimarĂ­ River Basin (12,000 km2), Chile.
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Conference name European Geosciences Union
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