4.7 Article

Numerical model development for investigating hydrologic pathways in shallow fluviokarst

Journal

JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY
Volume 593, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2020.125844

Keywords

Fluviokarst

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [1632888, 1933779]
  2. Center for Computational Sciences at the University of Kentucky
  3. Kentucky Senate Bill 271B Water Quality program
  4. Division Of Earth Sciences
  5. Directorate For Geosciences [1933779] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  6. Office of Integrative Activities
  7. Office Of The Director [1632888] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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This study developed a combined discrete-continuum fluviokarst numerical model and applied it to the Cane Run-Royal Spring basin in Kentucky, USA. Multi-objective calibration improved the representation of stream-cave connectivity, but was computationally expensive. Results provided evidence of a mature fluviokarst basin with a well-defined fracture-conduit network and phreatic aquifer.
Karst pathways and fluvial pathways control hydrology in shallow fluviokarst basins, and numerical modelling of fluviokarst is seldom reported. In this study, we developed a combined discrete-continuum fluviokarst numerical model by simulating surface river routing, in-stream swallet sources and sinks, epikarst storage and dynamic transfer, matrix bedrock interactions, and closed conduit phreatic flow. We applied the model to the Cane Run-Royal Spring basin in Kentucky, USA. Model evaluation indicated that spring discharge alone inadequately constrained model pathways and uncertainty. Instead multi-objective calibration, integrating riverine discharge and well-head data from multiple locations, assisted in identifying sensitive parameters (p < 0.05). Multi-objectives improved representation of stream-cave connectivity and limited prior knowledge biases of the system but was computationally expensive with 168 h required on a high-performance cluster. Results provided evidence for a mature fluviokarst basin with well-defined fracture-conduit network and phreatic aquifer. Residence times of karst pathways vary by five orders of magnitude, ranging from less than one hour in vertical swallets, 12.7 h in longitudinal conduits, 12.7 days in the vadose zone and epikarst, and 142.7 days in the bedrock matrix. Results suggest arrival of source waters to the subsurface systems is disconnected in time from the springflow response. Model simulations show a dimensionless vertical to longitudinal conveyance ratio helps predict swallets linking the fluvial and karst systems. Transferability of the developed model, and other karst models, is discussed relative to availability of information for karst basins.

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