<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="fgdc_classic.xsl"?>
<metadata xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:noNamespaceSchemaLocation="http://water.usgs.gov/GIS/metadata/usgswrd/fgdc-std-001-1998.xsd">
	<idinfo>
		<citation>
			<citeinfo>
				<origin>Faunt, Claudia C.</origin>
				<pubdate>2012</pubdate>
				<title>Surface-Water Network for the Central Valley Hydrologic Model (CVHM)</title>
				<geoform>vector digital data</geoform>
				<pubinfo>
					<pubplace>Reston, Virginia</pubplace>
					<publish>U.S. Geological Survey</publish>
				</pubinfo>
				<onlink>http://water.usgs.gov/lookup/getspatial?pp1766_cvhm_sfr_network</onlink>
				<lworkcit>
					<citeinfo>
						<origin>Faunt, Claudia C. (editor)</origin>
						<pubdate>2009</pubdate>
						<title>Groundwater Availability of the Central Valley Aquifer, California</title>
						<serinfo>
							<sername>Professional Paper</sername>
							<issue>1766</issue>
						</serinfo>
						<pubinfo>
							<pubplace>Reston, Virginia</pubplace>
							<publish>U.S. Geological Survey</publish>
						</pubinfo>
						<othercit>3 chapters, 1 appendix</othercit>
						<onlink>http://pubs.usgs.gov/pp/1766/PP_1766.pdf</onlink>
					</citeinfo>
				</lworkcit>
			</citeinfo>
		</citation>
		<descript>
			<abstract>This digital dataset contains the surface-water network for the Central Valley Hydrologic Model (CVHM).  The Central Valley encompasses an approximate 50,000-square-kilometer region of California. The complex hydrologic system of the Central Valley is simulated using the USGS numerical modeling code MODFLOW-FMP (Schmid and others, 2006).  This simulation is referred to here as the CVHM (Faunt, 2009). Utilizing MODFLOW-FMP, the CVHM simulates groundwater and surface-water flow, irrigated agriculture, land subsidence, and other key processes in the Central Valley on a monthly basis from 1961-2003.  The total active modeled area is 20,334 square-miles.  The CVHM includes complex surface-water management processes.  The hydrology of the present-day Central Valley and the CVHM model are driven by surface-water deliveries and associated groundwater pumpage.  The Streamflow Routing Package (SFR1) is linked to MODFLOW-FMP to facilitate the simulated conveyance of surface-water deliveries. If surface-water deliveries do not meet the farm delivery requirement, the FMP invokes simulated groundwater pumping to meet the demand.  The surface-water network represents a subset of the entire stream network in the valley.  Even so, it covers about 3,000 kilometers of surface-water and is simulated using 208 stream segments that represent 2244 stream reaches, with 43 inflows and 66 diversion locations providing 64 routed and 41 non-routed deliveries.  Most of these inflows are regulated by dams and most of the deliveries conveyed are through an extensive canal network.  The routed deliveries are convyed through the simulated surface-water network, while the non-routed delivery conveyance typically occurs through small canals or diversion ditches and are not directly simulated. Much of the surface-water diversion and delivery information was compiled by the California Department of Water Resources (DWR) for 21 water-balance subregions (WBSs) covering the valley floor (C. Brush, California Department of Water Resources, written commun., February 21, 2007).  The CVHM is the most recent regional-scale model of the Central Valley developed by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS).The CVHM was developed as part of the USGS Groundwater Resources Program (see "Foreword", Chapter A, page iii, for details).</abstract>
			<purpose>The surface-water network was resampled to the model grid and used as input to MODFLOW-FMP, the USGS 3-dimensional finite-difference code used to simulate flow in the CVHM.  This is a supporting dataset that provides the CVHM with the location and length of streams and canals that are directly simulated. The CVHM is a tool that accounts for integrated, variable water supply and demand, and simulates surface-water and groundwater-flow across the entire Central Valley system.</purpose>
			<supplinf>The stream-network dataset is one of many layers in a geospatial database supporting the USGS Central Valley Groundwater Availability Project. Regional groundwater availability studies quantify current groundwater resources, evaluate how those resources have changed through time, and provide tools that decision makers can use to predict system responses to future development and climate variability and change. To provide information to stakeholders addressing these issues, the USGS made a detailed assessment of groundwater availability of the Central Valley aquifer system, which includes: (1) the present status of groundwater resources; (2) characterization of how these resources have changed over time; and (3) tools to assess system responses to stresses from future human uses and climate variability and change.  This effort builds on previous investigations, such as the USGS Central Valley Regional Aquifer System and Analysis (CV-RASA) project and several other groundwater studies in the Valley completed by Federal, State and local agencies at various scales. Data from these previous studies were the foundation of the Central Valley geospatial database. These and other data were re-examined through a series of regional-scale hydrologic investigations to provide updated and spatially consistent interpretations for the Central Valley Groundwater Availability study. In some cases, new data were collected to augment existing information. Data compiled from the studies include geology (in particular, borehole lithology and the extent and thickness of the Corcoran Clay Member of the Tulare Formation), topography, remote sensing, climate (precipitation and temperature), geophysics, vegetation and land use, vegetation properties, hydrology (stream network and flows), groundwater levels, subsidence, chemistry, and soils.  Digital elevation models, geologic maps, borehole information, cross sections, and other 3-dimensional models were used to develop the texture model which represents the properties and geometry of the Central Valley alluvial deposits. The resulting geospatial database supports characterization and conceptualization of the Central Valley hydrologic system between 1961 and 2003, construction of 3-dimensional hydrogeologic framework and hydrologic flow models, and visualization of analysis and model results.</supplinf>
		</descript>
		<timeperd>
			<timeinfo>
				<sngdate>
					<caldate>2009</caldate>
				</sngdate>
			</timeinfo>
			<current>publication date</current>
		</timeperd>
		<status>
			<progress>Complete</progress>
			<update>None planned</update>
		</status>
		<spdom>
			<bounding>
				<westbc>-122.534013</westbc>
				<eastbc>-118.712157</eastbc>
				<northbc>40.615989</northbc>
				<southbc>35.228509</southbc>
			</bounding>
		</spdom>
		<keywords>
			<theme>
				<themekt>ISO 19115 Topic Category</themekt>
				<themekey>inlandWaters</themekey>
				<themekey>geoscientificinformation</themekey>
			</theme>
			<theme>
				<themekt>American Geological Institute Glossary of Geology (http://glossary.agiweb.org/dbtw-wpd/glossary/search.aspx)</themekt>
				<themekey>hydrology</themekey>
				<themekey>hydrogeology</themekey>
				<themekey>groundwater</themekey>
				<themekey>model</themekey>
				<themekey>surface water</themekey>
			</theme>
			<theme>
				<themekt>none</themekt>
				<themekey>Central Valley Aquifer</themekey>
				<themekey>Central Valley Hydrologic Model</themekey>
				<themekey>Texture Model</themekey>
				<themekey>Flow Model CVHM</themekey>
				<themekey>CV-RASA</themekey>
				<themekey>Groundwater Availability of the Central Valley Aquifer</themekey>
			</theme>
			<place>
				<placekt>U.S. Board of Geographic Names (BGN) and Geographic Names Information System (GNIS)</placekt>
				<placekey>California</placekey>
				<placekey>Central Valley</placekey>
				<placekey>Trinity County</placekey>
				<placekey>Shasta County</placekey>
				<placekey>Tehama County</placekey>
				<placekey>Humboldt County</placekey>
				<placekey>Butte County</placekey>
				<placekey>Mendocino County</placekey>
				<placekey>Glenn County</placekey>
				<placekey>Yuba County</placekey>
				<placekey>Lake County</placekey>
				<placekey>Nevada County</placekey>
				<placekey>Colusa County</placekey>
				<placekey>Sutter County</placekey>
				<placekey>Placer County</placekey>
				<placekey>El Dorado County</placekey>
				<placekey>Yolo County</placekey>
				<placekey>Sonoma County</placekey>
				<placekey>Napa County</placekey>
				<placekey>Sacramento County</placekey>
				<placekey>Amador County</placekey>
				<placekey>Solano County</placekey>
				<placekey>Calaveras County</placekey>
				<placekey>Tuolumne County</placekey>
				<placekey>San Joaquin County</placekey>
				<placekey>Contra Costa County</placekey>
				<placekey>Stanislaus County</placekey>
				<placekey>Alameda County</placekey>
				<placekey>Mariposa County</placekey>
				<placekey>Madera County</placekey>
				<placekey>Merced County</placekey>
				<placekey>Fresno County</placekey>
				<placekey>Santa Clara County</placekey>
				<placekey>San Benito County</placekey>
				<placekey>Monterey County</placekey>
				<placekey>Tulare County</placekey>
				<placekey>Kings County</placekey>
				<placekey>Kern County</placekey>
				<placekey>San Luis Obispo County</placekey>
				<placekey>Santa Barbara County</placekey>
				<placekey>Ventura County</placekey>
				<placekey>Sacramento Valley</placekey>
				<placekey>San Joaquin Valley</placekey>
				<placekey>Central Valley, California</placekey>
			</place>
		</keywords>
		<accconst>None.</accconst>
		<useconst>
Data have been checked to ensure the accuracy of the data. If any errors are detected, please notify the originating office. The U.S. Geological Survey strongly recommends that careful attention be paid to the metadata file associated with these data. The U.S. Geological Survey shall not be held liable for improper or incorrect use of the data described and (or) contained herein.

Acknowledgement of the U.S. Geological Survey would be appreciated in products derived from these data.

Any use of trade, product, or firm names is for descriptive purposes only and does not imply endorsement by the U.S. Government. Although this Federal Geographic Data Committee-compliant metadata file is intended to document the dataset in nonproprietary form, as well as in ArcGIS format, this metadata file may include some ArcGIS-specific terminology.
</useconst>
		<ptcontac>
			<cntinfo>
				<cntperp>
					<cntper>Claudia C. Faunt</cntper>
					<cntorg>U.S. Geological Survey, California Water Science Center</cntorg>
				</cntperp>
				<cntpos>Hydrologist</cntpos>
				<cntaddr>
					<addrtype>mailing and physical address</addrtype>
					<address>4165 Spruance Road, Suite 200</address>
					<city>San Diego</city>
					<state>CA</state>
					<postal>92101</postal>
					<country>USA</country>
				</cntaddr>
				<cntvoice>(619) 225-6142</cntvoice>
				<cntfax>(619) 225-6101</cntfax>
				<cntemail>ccfaunt@usgs.gov</cntemail>
			</cntinfo>
		</ptcontac>
		<browse>
			<browsen>http://water.usgs.gov/GIS/browse/pp1766_cvhm_sfr_network.png</browsen>
			<browsed>Illlustration of data set</browsed>
			<browset>png</browset>
		</browse>
		<datacred>Spatial datasets supporting the Central Valley Groundwater Availability project were developed primarily by the U.S. Geological Survey's (USGS) Groundwater Resources Program.  This program is conducting large-scale multidisciplinary regional studies of groundwater availability.  The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation is supporting the updating of the Central Valley datasets and their documentation and release.</datacred>
		<native>Microsoft Windows XP Version 5.1 (Build 2600) Service Pack 3; ESRI ArcCatalog 9.3.1.3500</native>
		<crossref>
			<citeinfo>
				<origin>Schmid, Wolfgang</origin>
				<origin>Hanson, R. T.</origin>
				<origin>Maddock, Thomas, III</origin>
				<origin>Leake, S. A.</origin>
				<pubdate>2006</pubdate>
				<title>User guide for the farm process (FMP1) for the U.S. Geological Survey's modular three-dimensional finite-difference ground-water flow model, MODFLOW-2000</title>
				<serinfo>
					<sername>Techniques and Methods</sername>
					<issue>6-A17</issue>
				</serinfo>
				<pubinfo>
					<pubplace>Sacramento, CA</pubplace>
					<publish>USGS California Water Science Center</publish>
				</pubinfo>
				<onlink>http://pubs.usgs.gov/tm/2006/tm6A17/</onlink>
			</citeinfo>
		</crossref>
		<crossref>
			<citeinfo>
				<origin>C. Brush</origin>
				<pubdate>02212007</pubdate>
				<title>Written Communication</title>
				<pubinfo>
					<pubplace>Sacramento, CA</pubplace>
					<publish>California Department of Water Resources</publish>
				</pubinfo>
			</citeinfo>
		</crossref>
	</idinfo>
	<dataqual>
		<attracc>
			<attraccr>Attributes added by the GIS and the data-set author were checked by inspection using a GIS. In addition, attributes were checked and evaluated as part of the review process associated with the publication of the source report.</attraccr>
		</attracc>
		<logic>Lines forming polygons join at endpoints to completely enclose defined areas. Lines not enclosing areas do not intersect. No duplicate line features exist and all nodes are represented by a single coordinate pair which indicates the beginning or end of a line. All vertices that define the shape of the line are represented by a unique coordinate pair.</logic>
		<complete>The dataset is complete and is not anticipated to change.</complete>
		<posacc>
			<horizpa>
				<horizpar>Horizontal positional accuracy of line features in the dataset was tested by visually comparing to digital source maps by using a GIS system.</horizpar>
			</horizpa>
		</posacc>
		<lineage>
			<srcinfo>
				<srccite>
					<citeinfo>
						<origin>Faunt, C. C.</origin>
						<pubdate>2009</pubdate>
						<title>Professional Paper 1766; Chapter B - Groundwater Availability in California's Central Valley</title>
						<geoform>document</geoform>
						<serinfo>
							<sername>Professional Paper</sername>
							<issue>1766</issue>
						</serinfo>
						<pubinfo>
							<pubplace>Reston, VA</pubplace>
							<publish>U.S. Geological Survey</publish>
						</pubinfo>
						<onlink>http://pubs.usgs.gov/pp/1766/PP_1766.pdf</onlink>
					</citeinfo>
				</srccite>
				<srcscale>500000</srcscale>
				<typesrc>online</typesrc>
				<srctime>
					<timeinfo>
						<sngdate>
							<caldate>2009</caldate>
						</sngdate>
					</timeinfo>
					<srccurr>publication date</srccurr>
				</srctime>
				<srccitea>Faunt and others (2009)</srccitea>
				<srccontr>See Professional Paper 1766 - Groundwater Availability of the Central Valley Aquifer, California.</srccontr>
			</srcinfo>
			<srcinfo>
				<srccite>
					<citeinfo>
						<origin>U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, Mid-Pacific Region, MPGIS Service Center</origin>
						<pubdate>2003</pubdate>
						<title>hydro24ca - Selected hydrologic features 1:24,000-scale for California</title>
						<edition>2.0 - CLASSIFICATION = General</edition>
						<geoform>vector digital data</geoform>
						<pubinfo>
							<pubplace>Sacramento, CA</pubplace>
							<publish>U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, Mid-Pacific Region, MPGIS Service Center</publish>
						</pubinfo>
						<onlink>http://projects.atlas.ca.gov/frs/?group_id=39&amp;release_id=23</onlink>
					</citeinfo>
				</srccite>
				<typesrc>online</typesrc>
				<srctime>
					<timeinfo>
						<sngdate>
							<caldate>2009</caldate>
						</sngdate>
					</timeinfo>
					<srccurr>publication date</srccurr>
				</srctime>
				<srccitea>hydro24ca</srccitea>
				<srccontr>major hydrologic features of the Central Valley, California</srccontr>
			</srcinfo>
			<procstep>
				<procdesc>A GIS was used to produce a subset of the stream network from the USGS 1:24000 scale stream network to represent Central Valley's stream network for the CVHM.</procdesc>
				<srcused>NHD</srcused>
				<procdate>04012005</procdate>
				<srcprod>Faunt and others (2009)</srcprod>
				<proccont>
					<cntinfo>
						<cntperp>
							<cntper>Faunt, C.C.</cntper>
							<cntorg>USGS</cntorg>
						</cntperp>
						<cntpos>Hydrologist</cntpos>
						<cntaddr>
							<addrtype>mailing and physical address</addrtype>
							<address>4165 Spruance Road, Suite 200</address>
							<city>San Diego</city>
							<state>CA</state>
							<postal>92101</postal>
							<country>USA</country>
						</cntaddr>
						<cntvoice>(619) 225-6142</cntvoice>
						<cntemail>ccfaunt@usgs.gov</cntemail>
					</cntinfo>
				</proccont>
			</procstep>
		</lineage>
	</dataqual>
	<spdoinfo>
		<indspref>Central Valley, comprised of the Sacramento Valley on the north and the San Joaquin Valley on the south, located in the state of California.</indspref>
		<direct>Vector</direct>
		<ptvctinf>
			<sdtsterm>
				<sdtstype>String</sdtstype>
				<ptvctcnt>125</ptvctcnt>
			</sdtsterm>
		</ptvctinf>
	</spdoinfo>
	<spref>
		<horizsys>
			<planar>
				<mapproj>
					<mapprojn>Albers Conical Equal Area</mapprojn>
					<albers>
						<stdparll>29.500000</stdparll>
						<stdparll>45.500000</stdparll>
						<longcm>-120.000000</longcm>
						<latprjo>23.000000</latprjo>
						<feast>0.000000</feast>
						<fnorth>0.000000</fnorth>
					</albers>
				</mapproj>
				<planci>
					<plance>coordinate pair</plance>
					<coordrep>
						<absres>100</absres>
						<ordres>100</ordres>
					</coordrep>
					<plandu>meters</plandu>
				</planci>
			</planar>
			<geodetic>
				<horizdn>North American Datum of 1983</horizdn>
				<ellips>Geodetic Reference System 80</ellips>
				<semiaxis>6378137.000000</semiaxis>
				<denflat>298.257222</denflat>
			</geodetic>
		</horizsys>
	</spref>
	<eainfo>
		<detailed>
			<enttyp>
				<enttypl>cvhm_sfr_network</enttypl>
				<enttypd>The Central Valley's Streamflow Network</enttypd>
				<enttypds>dataset originator</enttypds>
			</enttyp>
			<attr>
				<attrlabl>FID</attrlabl>
				<attrdef>Internal feature number.</attrdef>
				<attrdefs>ESRI</attrdefs>
				<attrdomv>
					<udom>Sequential unique whole numbers that are automatically generated.</udom>
				</attrdomv>
			</attr>
			<attr>
				<attrlabl>Shape</attrlabl>
				<attrdef>Feature geometry.</attrdef>
				<attrdefs>ESRI</attrdefs>
				<attrdomv>
					<udom>Coordinates defining the features.</udom>
				</attrdomv>
			</attr>
			<attr>
				<attrlabl>NAME</attrlabl>
				<attrdef>Common name of the body of water</attrdef>
				<attrdefs>Geographic Names Information System</attrdefs>
				<attrdomv>
					<codesetd>
						<codesetn>Stream Class</codesetn>
						<codesets>Geographic Names Information System  (GNIS)</codesets>
					</codesetd>
				</attrdomv>
			</attr>
		</detailed>
	</eainfo>
	<distinfo>
		<distrib>
			<cntinfo>
				<cntorgp>
					<cntorg>U.S. Geological Survey</cntorg>
				</cntorgp>
				<cntpos>Ask USGS -- Water Webserver Team</cntpos>
				<cntaddr>
					<addrtype>mailing address</addrtype>
					<address>445 National Center</address>
					<city>Reston</city>
					<state>VA</state>
					<postal>20192</postal>
					<country>USA</country>
				</cntaddr>
				<cntvoice>1-888-275-8747 (1-888-ASK-USGS)</cntvoice>
				<cntemail>http://water.usgs.gov/user_feedback_form.html</cntemail>
			</cntinfo>
		</distrib>
		<resdesc>
Downloadable Data
Digital datasets representing Surface-Water Network for the computer model of the hydrogeologic landscape and groundwater flow in California's Central Valley.
</resdesc>
		<distliab>Although these data have been used by the U.S. Geological Survey, U.S. Department of the Interior, no warranty expressed or implied is made by the U.S. Geological Survey as to the accuracy of the data.  The act of distribution shall not constitute any such warranty, and no responsibility is assumed by the U.S. Geological Survey in the use of these data, software, or related materials.
The use of firm, trade, or brand names in this report is for identification purposes only and does not constitute endorsement by the U.S. Geological Survey.  The names mentioned in this document may be trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective trademark owners.</distliab>
		<stdorder>
			<digform>
				<digtinfo>
					<formname>SHP</formname>
					<formvern>ESRI Shapefile</formvern>
					<transize>0.096</transize>
				</digtinfo>
				<digtopt>
					<onlinopt>
						<computer>
							<networka>
								<networkr>http://water.usgs.gov/GIS/dsdl/pp1766_cvhm_sfr_network.zip</networkr>
							</networka>
						</computer>
					</onlinopt>
				</digtopt>
			</digform>
			<fees>None. This dataset is provided by the USGS as a public service.</fees>
		</stdorder>
		<availabl>
			<timeinfo>
				<sngdate>
					<caldate>2011</caldate>
				</sngdate>
			</timeinfo>
		</availabl>
	</distinfo>
	<metainfo>
		<metd>20120824</metd>
		<metc>
			<cntinfo>
				<cntorgp>
					<cntorg>U.S. Geological Survey</cntorg>
				</cntorgp>
				<cntpos>Ask USGS -- Water Webserver Team</cntpos>
				<cntaddr>
					<addrtype>mailing address</addrtype>
					<address>445 National Center</address>
					<city>Reston</city>
					<state>VA</state>
					<postal>20192</postal>
					<country>USA</country>
				</cntaddr>
				<cntvoice>1-888-275-8747 (1-888-ASK-USGS)</cntvoice>
				<cntemail>http://answers.usgs.gov/cgi-bin/gsanswers?pemail=h2oteam&amp;subject=GIS+Datase+pp1766_cvhm_sfr_network</cntemail>
			</cntinfo>
		</metc>
		<metstdn>FGDC Content Standards for Digital Geospatial Metadata</metstdn>
		<metstdv>FGDC-STD-001-1998</metstdv>
	</metainfo>
</metadata>
