Russian River Integrated Hydrologic Model (RRIHM): Watershed Data
Dates
Publication Date
2023-05-26
Citation
Seymour, W.A., and Engott, J.A., 2023, Russian River Integrated Hydrologic Model (RRIHM): Watershed Data: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P9PLR5H1.
Summary
The Russian River Watershed (RRW) covers about 1,300 square miles (without Santa Rosa Plain) of urban, agricultural, and forested lands in northern Sonoma County and southern Mendocino County, California. Communities in the RRW depend on a combination of Russian River water and groundwater to meet their water-supply demands. Water is used primarily for agricultural irrigation, municipal and private wells supply, and commercial uses - such as for wineries and recreation. Annual rainfall in the RRW is highly variable, making it prone to droughts and flooding from atmospheric river events. In order to better understand surface-water and groundwater issues, the USGS is creating a Coupled Ground-Water and Surface-Water Flow Model (GSFLOW; [...]
Summary
The Russian River Watershed (RRW) covers about 1,300 square miles (without Santa Rosa Plain) of urban, agricultural, and forested lands in northern Sonoma County and southern Mendocino County, California. Communities in the RRW depend on a combination of Russian River water and groundwater to meet their water-supply demands. Water is used primarily for agricultural irrigation, municipal and private wells supply, and commercial uses - such as for wineries and recreation. Annual rainfall in the RRW is highly variable, making it prone to droughts and flooding from atmospheric river events. In order to better understand surface-water and groundwater issues, the USGS is creating a Coupled Ground-Water and Surface-Water Flow Model (GSFLOW; Markstrom and others, 2008) of the RRW. This model will include climate, geology, surface-water, groundwater, and land-use data.
This data release is legacy spatial data that covers the Russian River watershed. This data was used as input to develop initial parameter values for the Russian River Integrated Hydrologic Model (RRIHM), a GSFLOW model. See the publication "Input data processing tools for the integrated hydrologic model GSFLOW" (https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1364815217311908#sec9) for information on how this data set was used was used to develop initial parameters.