Recharge estimation methodologies employed by the Environment Agency of England and Wales for the purposes of regional groundwater resource modelling

Author:

Quinn S. A.1,Liss D.23,Johnson D.4,Van Wonderen J. J.5,Power T.1

Affiliation:

1. AMEC Environment & Infrastructure, 17 Angel Gate, City Road, London EC1 V 2SH, UK

2. AMEC Environment & Infrastructure, Northumbria House, Regent Centre, Gosforth, Newcastle upon Tyne NE3 3PX, UK

3. Present address: Agricultural Services, SGS Institut Fresnius, Im Maisel 14, 65232, Taunusstein, Germany

4. ADAS, Woodthorne, Wergs Road, Wolverhampton WV6 8TQ, UK

5. Mott MacDonald, Demeter House, Station Road, Cambridge CB1 2RS, UK

Abstract

AbstractRecharge calculations based on daily soil moisture balance models define the resource available for most regional-scale groundwater models used by the environmental regulator in England and Wales. A switch in recent years from the Penman–Grindley methodology to the Food and Agricultural Organization approach has improved the representation of soil properties in these calculations. A new Meteorological Office algorithm for calculating potential evapotranspiration inputs has also been adopted and rain-gauge data processing on individual models are currently being streamlined towards the use of nationally derived grids. A range of infiltration, bypass and runoff–recharge mechanisms have been conceptualized and modelled incorporating simple representation of unsaturated zone storage and flow processes. This paper reviews the recent changes adopted and considers future challenges.

Publisher

Geological Society of London

Subject

Geology,Ocean Engineering,Water Science and Technology

Reference63 articles.

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2. Allen R. G. Pereira L. S. Raes D. Smith M. (1998) Crop Evapotranspiration: Guidelines for Computing Crop Water Requirements (Food and Agriculture Organization, Rome).

3. GIS-based recharge estimation by coupling surface–subsurface water balances

4. Future of distributed modelling: The Systeme Hydrologique Europeen

5. Boorman B. D. Hollis J. M. Lilly A. (1995) Hydrology of Soil Types: a Hydrologically-Based Classification of the Soils of the United Kingdom, Institute of Hydrology Report (Institute of Hydrology, Wallingford), 126.

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