Application of the Groundwater Data Mapper Tool to Assess Storage Changes in a Groundwater-Driven Basin in the Klamath Watershed, Oregon, USA

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Abstract

Streamflow in the Upper Williamson Basin of the Klamath Watershed is groundwater dominated with year-to-year fluctuations in both volume and duration, including multi-year periods with no streamflow. The relationship between precipitation, groundwater, and streamflow is difficult to characterize because of the limited number of monitoring wells, large data gaps, and a unique geologic structure that controls flow. To understand why surface flow has ceased entirely, we use the Groundwater Data Mapper Tool to impute gaps in the well data using machine learning and open-source Earth observation data and then compute changes in groundwater storage over time. Our research confirms that groundwater storage is correlated to streamflow and finds that there is a control groundwater storage below which flow does not occur. Furthermore, we find that groundwater storage is correlated to rainfall with a three- to four-year delay. This lag and the geologic structural control mean that even with several years of above-average precipitation, live flow may take years to resume. This insight allows water managers to understand and adjust for this highly irregular streamflow for better management decisions.

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