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JournalISSN: 2328-7055

Techniques and Methods 

United States Geological Survey
About: Techniques and Methods is an academic journal published by United States Geological Survey. The journal publishes majorly in the area(s): MODFLOW & Geological survey. It has an ISSN identifier of 2328-7055. It is also open access. Over the lifetime, 180 publications have been published receiving 8353 citations. The journal is also known as: Techniques and methods report of the U.S. Geological Survey & USGS techniques and methods.


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OtherDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose a novel approach to solve the problem of homonymity in homophily, and propose a solution to the problem: homophysphysics.
Abstract: ............................................................................................................................................1 Chapter

1,518 citations

OtherDOI
TL;DR: The SEAWAT program as discussed by the authors is a coupled version of MODFLOW and MT3DMS designed to simulate threedimensional, variable-density, saturated ground-water flow, and it includes additional functions for representing the dependence on temperature.
Abstract: The SEAWAT program is a coupled version of MODFLOW and MT3DMS designed to simulate threedimensional, variable-density, saturated ground-water flow. Flexible equations were added to the program to allow fluid density to be calculated as a function of one or more MT3DMS species. Fluid density may also be calculated as a function of fluid pressure. The effect of fluid viscosity variations on ground-water flow was included as an option. Fluid viscosity can be calculated as a function of one or more MT3DMS species, and the program includes additional functions for representing the dependence on temperature. Although MT3DMS and SEAWAT are not explicitly designed to simulate heat transport, temperature can be simulated as one of the species by entering appropriate transport coefficients. For example, the process of heat conduction is mathematically analogous to Fickian diffusion. Heat conduction can be represented in SEAWAT by assigning a thermal diffusivity for the temperature species (instead of a molecular diffusion coefficient for a solute species). Heat exchange with the solid matrix can be treated in a similar manner by using the mathematically equivalent process of solute sorption. By combining flexible equations for fluid density and viscosity with multi-species transport, SEAWAT Version 4 represents variable-density ground-water flow coupled with multi-species solute and heat transport. SEAWAT Version 4 is based on MODFLOW-2000 and MT3DMS and retains all of the functionality of SEAWAT-2000. SEAWAT Version 4 also supports new simulation options for coupling flow and transport, and for representing constant-head boundaries. In previous versions of SEAWAT, the flow equation was solved for every transport timestep, regardless of whether or not there was a large change in fluid density. A new option was implemented in SEAWAT Version 4 that allows users to control how often the flow field is updated. New options were also implemented for representing constant-head boundaries with the Time-Variant Constant-Head (CHD) Package. These options allow for increased flexibility when using CHD flow boundaries with the zero-dispersive flux solute boundaries implemented by MT3DMS at constant-head cells. This report contains revised input instructions for the MT3DMS Dispersion (DSP) Package, Variable-Density Flow (VDF) Package, Viscosity (VSC) Package, and CHD Package. The report concludes with seven cases of an example problem designed to highlight many of the new features. 1 Florida Integrated Science Center, U.S. Geological Survey, Fort Lauderdale, Florida. 2 Department of Mathematics, Physics, and Computer Science, Georgetown College, Georgetown, Kentucky. 3 Department of Earth Sciences, Florida International University, Miami, Florida. 4 Schlumberger Water Services, Fort Myers, Florida. 2 SEAWAT Version 4: A Computer Program for Simulation of Multi-Species Solute and Heat Transport

458 citations

OtherDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, an integrated hydrologic model called GSFLOW (ground-water and surface-water FLOW) was developed to simulate coupled ground water and surface water resources.
Abstract: The need to assess the effects of variability in climate, biota, geology, and human activities on water availability and flow requires the development of models that couple two or more components of the hydrologic cycle. An integrated hydrologic model called GSFLOW (Ground-water and Surface-water FLOW) was developed to simulate coupled ground-water and surface-water resources. The new model is based on the integration of the U.S. Geological Survey Precipitation-Runoff Modeling System (PRMS) and the U.S. Geological Survey Modular Ground-Water Flow Model (MODFLOW). Additional model components were developed, and existing components were modified, to facilitate integration of the models. Methods were developed to route flow among the PRMS Hydrologic Response Units (HRUs) and between the HRUs and the MODFLOW finite-difference cells. This report describes the organization, concepts, design, and mathematical formulation of all GSFLOW model components. An important aspect of the integrated model design is its ability to conserve water mass and to provide comprehensive water budgets for a location of interest. This report includes descriptions of how water budgets are calculated for the integrated model and for individual model components. GSFLOW provides a robust modeling system for simulating flow through the hydrologic cycle, while allowing for future enhancements to incorporate other simulation techniques.

366 citations

OtherDOI
TL;DR: This report documents the computer codes UCODE_2005 and six post-processors, which can be used with existing process models to perform sensitivity analysis, data needs assessment, calibration, prediction, and uncertainty analysis.
Abstract: This report documents the computer codes UCODE_2005 and six post-processors. Together the codes can be used with existing process models to perform sensitivity analysis, data needs assessment, calibration, prediction, and uncertainty analysis. Any process model or set of models can be used; the only requirements are that models have numerical (ASCII or text only) input and output files, that the numbers in these files have sufficient significant digits, that all required models can be run from a single batch file or script, and that simulated values are continuous functions of the parameter values. Process models can include pre-processors and post-processors as well as one or more models related to the processes of interest (physical, chemical, and so on), making UCODE_2005 extremely powerful. An estimated parameter can be a quantity that appears in the input files of the process model(s), or a quantity used in an equation that produces a value that appears in the input files. In the latter situation, the equation is user-defined. UCODE_2005 can compare observations and simulated equivalents. The simulated equivalents can be any simulated value written in the process-model output files or can be calculated from simulated values with user-defined equations. The quantities can be model results, or dependent variables. For example, for ground-water models they can be heads, flows, concentrations, and so on. Prior, or direct, information on estimated parameters also can be considered. Statistics are calculated to quantify the comparison of observations and simulated equivalents, including a weighted least1 International Ground Water Modeling Center and the Colorado School of Mines, Golden, Colorado, USA 2 U.S. Geological Survey, Boulder, Colorado, USA 3 U.S. Geological Survey, Lakewood, Colorado, USA 4 Department of Earth Sciences, University of Aarhus, Aarhus, Denmark

271 citations

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Journal in previous years
YearPapers
20233
202215
20212
202011
20199
201813