Catalog Item
S&T Project 1809 Final Report: Mercury Loading to Streams and Reservoirs: A Process-Based Approach
Heavy rainfall and subsequent sediment and mercury movement from watersheds have serious economic, environmental and social impacts on communities around the world. Hydrological models have become useful decision support tools for flood warning, watershed management and mercury delivery to reservoirs. The development of a process-based, mesh-distributed watershed model, however, is complex as it involves a range of disciplines and spans multiple spatial and temporal scales. In this research, a process-based and mesh-distributed model, suitable for both event-based and continuous simulations, was developed. The watershed is conceptualized in three distinct zones: a surface region and two subsurface zones representing the unsaturated soil and groundwater. Overland runoff is governed by the 2D diffusive wave equation with an optional 1D channel network solver; water in the unsaturated zone is modeled through mass conservation assuming dominant vertical processes; and the saturated groundwater flow is governed by the 2D Dupuit approximation. Soil erosion and sediment transport are governed by multi-size non-equilibrium equations incorporating the processes of soil entrainment, deposition and transport. The mercury is routed using also the mass conservation equation. The model is driven by meteorological input, taking into account vegetation characteristics to compute evaporation and plant transpiration, and land use and soil type properties. The new model represents a generalization of the existing models in an attempt to overcome some of the current model shortcomings.
Catalog Record Title
Data and Report from S&T Project 1809: Mercury Loading to Streams and Reservoirs: A Process-Based Approach
Generation Effort
S&T Project 1809: Mercury Loading to Streams and Reservoirs: A Process-Based Approach
Location Name
Western US
Type
Uploaded file(s)
File Type
PDF
Publisher
Bureau of Reclamation
Publication Date
Friday, September 30th, 2022
Update Frequency
not planned
Last Update
Friday, September 23rd, 2022
Disclaimer
The findings and conclusions of this work are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent the views of the Bureau of Reclamation.

