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SEAWAT, MODFLOW-2000, and SHARP models used to simulate future water-supply scenarios, Cape May County, New Jersey

Dates

Release Date
2021-01-01
Start Date
1896-01-01
End Date
2050-12-31
Publication Date

Citation

Carleton, G.B. and Pope, D.A., 2021, SEAWAT, MODFLOW-2000, and SHARP models used to simulate future water-supply scenarios, Cape May County, New Jersey: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P9GQT3ZC.

Summary

Three groundwater flow models, using MODFLOW-2000, SEAWAT, and SHARP model codes, were used to evaluate plans to supply potable and non-potable water to residents and businesses of Cape May County, New Jersey until at least 2050. The ideal plan would meet projected demands and minimize adverse effects on currently used sources of potable, non- potable, and ecological water supplies. The U.S. Geological Survey used two previously developed groundwater flow models, as well as a newly developed groundwater flow model, to evaluate the shallow and deep aquifer systems in Cape May County. The groundwater flow in the shallow and deep aquifer systems of Cape May County were simulated separately. Flow in the shallow aquifers was simulated with [...]

Contacts

Point of Contact :
Glen B. Carleton, U.S. Geological Survey
Originator :
Glen B. Carleton, Daryll A. Pope
Metadata Contact :
U.S. Geological Survey
SDC Data Owner :
New Jersey Water Science Center
USGS Mission Area :
Water Resources

Attached Files

Click on title to download individual files attached to this item.

readme.txt 42.08 KB text/plain
modelgeoref.txt 701 Bytes text/plain
ancillary.zip 1.35 MB application/zip
bin.zip 2.81 MB application/zip
georef.zip 5.08 KB application/zip
model.zip 91.8 MB application/zip
source.zip 15.5 MB application/zip
sir2009-5187Thumbnail.jpg thumbnail 700.89 KB image/jpeg
1.61 GB application/zip

Purpose

The SEAWAT groundwater model was developed and used in conjunction with the existing MODFLOW-2000 Cape May-Atlantic City (CMAC) and N.J. Coastal Plain SHARP models to determine the ability of different withdrawal schemes to meet future water needs without adversely affecting the ecological water supply, increasing saltwater intrusion, or causing large declines in water levels in the confined aquifers. The development of the model input and output files included in this data release are documented in U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Report 2009-5187 (https://doi.org/10.3133/sir20095187).
Image of the composite model domain and active areas of the SEAWAT and MODFLOW-2000 models.
Image of the composite model domain and active areas of the SEAWAT and MODFLOW-2000 models.

Map

Communities

  • Model Data Management Function (MDMF)

Tags

Provenance

These data were originally released on the Water Mission Area National Spatial Data Infrastructure Node and were migrated to sciencebase.gov in 2023.

Additional Information

Identifiers

Type Scheme Key
DOI https://www.sciencebase.gov/vocab/category/item/identifier doi:10.5066/P9GQT3ZC

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