STRUCTURAL CONTROLS TO SUCCESSFULLY MODEL GROUNDWATER FLOW WITHIN THE MANTLED KARST OF THE SAVOY EXPERIMENTAL WATERSHED, NORTHWEST ARKANSAS
Identification of fractures, sinkholes, sinking streams, caves, springs, seeps and other karst features within SEW was completed using field reconnaissance and inspection of aerial photography, satellite imagery, and topographic maps. Digital data sets for elevation, landuse, location of karst features, and orthophotoquads were compiled in ArcView GIS. These digital data provided the basis for defining physical controls on groundwater flow which in turn were used for model discretization using Visual Modflow.
The model was initially calibrated to low-flow discharge data for two springs draining a portion of SEW. This steady-state calibration was followed by calibration to a transient condition resulting from a significant storm pulse. Model verification was completed for subsequent low-flow periods and storm induced transient events. The calibrated Visual Modflow model was used in conjunction with MT3D to reproduce breakthrough curves for low-flow tracer data for the conservative tracers Rhodamine WT dye and chloride. Using various boundary conditions within the model, flow and conservative contaminant transport were represented showing that the majority of the flow travels within fractures. Given sufficient control of the structural parameters, mantled karst aquifers can be successfully modeled.