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Regionalization of Groundwater Residence Time Using Metamodeling
Author(s) -
Starn J. J.,
Belitz K.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
water resources research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.863
H-Index - 217
eISSN - 1944-7973
pISSN - 0043-1397
DOI - 10.1029/2017wr021531
Subject(s) - weibull distribution , aquifer , kriging , parametric statistics , inverse gaussian distribution , groundwater , hydrology (agriculture) , statistics , soil science , environmental science , geology , mathematics , geotechnical engineering , distribution (mathematics) , mathematical analysis
Groundwater residence‐time distributions (RTDs) are critical for assessing susceptibility of water resources to degradation. A novel combination of numerical modeling and statistical methods allows estimation of regional RTDs with unprecedented speed. In this method, particle RTDs are generated in 30 type locales in the northeastern glaciated U.S. by using automated generalized finite‐difference groundwater flow and advective transport models. Targets for statistical learning were created from particle RTDs by fitting Weibull, gamma, and inverse Gaussian distributions. Whole‐basin flux‐weighted RTDs were well fit by one‐component Weibull distributions. Flux‐weighted RTDs at stressed receptors such as wells often produced more complicated RTDs that required a two‐component mixture to fit. A Multitask LASSO regression was trained on the parametric RTDs using hydrogeographic features of the modeled areas as explanatory features. In this way, RTDs are regionalized with mappable physical features such as recharge and aquifer volume. The shape, location, and scale parameters of the parametric RTDs are strongly related to the mean exponential age. The shape parameter of the distribution, which controls deviation from exponential, is additionally a function of aquifer heterogeneity and hydrologic features. Regionalized RTDs provide useful metrics with respect to groundwater lag times and solute loading to streams. The lag time between input and output contained in the RTD is critical to understanding the relation between the land surface and human and ecological receptors.