MODFLOW MODELING FOR A PROPOSED ARTIFICIAL SALMON SPAWNING CHANNEL EXTENSION NEAR HYDER, ALASKA
Twenty monitor wells were installed at the site of the proposed channel extension during the summer of 2006. Slug and pumping tests were performed to measure the hydraulic conductivity at each well location, with values ranging from 0.5 to 1,500 feet per day. Water-levels were recorded twice daily in each well using Solinst Leveloggers for a period of 117 days (July to November 2006). Water-level fluctuations varied from 1.46 to 6.25 feet, and averaged 3.22 feet during this period. Discharge measurements were also made at each of 16 weirs along the upper portion of Marx Creek. The discharge at Wier 1 at the headwaters of the creek was 31,086 cubic feet per day, and the discharge at Weir 16 was 972,000 cubic feet per day.
These data have been used to create a MODFLOW ground-water flow model. The model was calibrated to the water-level data for the 117-day period from July to November 2006. The maximum difference between the measured and model-calculated heads was 4.32 feet, and the average difference was only 2.57 feet. After calibration the proposed channel extension was added to the model and it was again run for 117 days, at which time steady-state conditions had been reached. According to the model results, the discharge of the proposed extension should be approximately 29% greater than the discharge in the existing channel, and the extension should not significantly affect the discharge of the existing channel.