Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Hydrologic/Watershed Modeling Glenn Tootle, P.E. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering University of Nevada, Las Vegas

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Hydrologic/Watershed Modeling Glenn Tootle, P.E. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering University of Nevada, Las Vegas"— Presentation transcript:

1 Hydrologic/Watershed Modeling Glenn Tootle, P.E. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering University of Nevada, Las Vegas tootleg@unlv.nevada.edu, Ph.D. Department of Civil and Architectural Engineering University of Wyoming tootleg@uwyo.edu

2 Questions?  Who has used / developed a hydrologic model?  What model(s) did you use?  Examples

3 Conceptual Model of Watershed Modeling Typical Input Topography Soil Characteristics Land cover Land use Meteorological data Typical Output Streamflow Subsurface Flow Depth to water table

4 Steps to Hydrologic Modeling 1.Delineate watershed 2.Obtain hydrologic and geographic data 3.Select modeling approach 4.Calibrate/Verify model 5.Use model for assessment/prediction/design

5 What is a Watershed?  Area that topographically contributes to the drainage to a point of interest Natural Watershed Points of Interest Road crossing Stream gage Reservoir inlet Wastewater treatment plant Location of stream restoration

6 Urban Watershed

7 USGS Quad Map

8 Digital Elevation Model (DEM)  Digital file that stores the elevation of the land surface a specified grid cell size (e.g., 30 meters)

9 Geographic Data  Land cover  Land use

10 Geographic Data  Soil type/classification

11 Hydrologic Data  Meteorological Data –Temperature –Precipitation –Wind speed –Humidity  Extrapolation of point measurements –Theissen Polygons –Inverse distance weighting

12 Hydrologic Data  Hydrologic Data –Streamflow  Peak discharge  Daily flow volume  Annual flow volume –Soil moisture –Groundwater level Streamflow

13 Modeling Approaches (examples) TIME SCALE Event-based (minute to day) Continuous Simulation (days – years) Empirical Regression equ’s Transfer Functions Simple models Rational Method SCS Unit Hydrograph Simple Model Physically-based Based on physical processes Complicated Many parameters KINEROS Stanford Watershed Model TOPMODELSWATVIC-3LTOPMODEL

14 Basis for Many Hydrologic Models  Hydrologic Budget (In – Out = ΔStorage) Watershed Precipitation (P) Groundwater in (GW in ) Evaporation (E) Transpiration (T) Streamflow (Q) Groundwater out (GW out ) Reservoir Infiltration (I) (P + GW in ) – (E + T + I + GW out + Q) = ΔStorage reservoir

15 Which Model Should be Used?  It Depends on: –What time scale are you working at? –What hydrologic quantity are you trying to obtain? –What data do you have for your watershed? –How fast of a computer do you have?

16 Spatial Scaling of Models Lumped Parameters assigned to each subbasin A1A1 A2A2 A3A3 Fully-Distributed Parameters assigned to each grid cell Semi-Distributed Parameters assigned to each grid cell, but cells with same parameters are grouped

17 Stanford Watershed Model (HSPF)  Physically-based and continuous simulation

18 Variable Infiltration Capacity (VIC-3L)  Continuous simulation and physically-based  Macroscale hydrologic model that solves full water and energy balances

19 VIC-3L Example

20 Calibrating a Model  Typically the model is calibrated against observed streamflow data  Depending on the model complexity, parameters are adjusted until observed streamflow equals model streamflow  Which observed value to use: –Q peak –Q volume –t peak Q peak Q t t peak Q volume

21 Sensitive Parameters  Precipitation  Soil parameters –Hydraulic conductivity –Soil water holding capacity  Evaporation (for continuous simulation)  Flow routing parameters (for event-based)

22 Uncertainties  Precipitation –Extrapolation of point to other areas –Temporal resolution of data  Soils information –Surveys are based on site visits and then extrapolated  Routing parameters –Usually assigned based on empirical studies

23 Use of Models  Assessment –What happens if land use/land cover is changed?  Prediction –Flood forecasting  Design –How much flow will occur in a 100 year storm?

24 QUESTIONS


Download ppt "Hydrologic/Watershed Modeling Glenn Tootle, P.E. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering University of Nevada, Las Vegas"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google