UNIT 10 -- MODFLOW GUIs:

Our modern world includes Graphical User Interfaces or (GUIs) to facilitate data input and output to ground-water models. It is essential that you can create, read, and edit the text input and output files from a computer code, but it is also essential that you be able to use GUIs. Without GUIs you would be so slow in your modeling work that your company would not be competitive.

Of course, these tools will help you with your semester project, but try to think in terms of the global issues related to the GUIs so that you will be better able to cope with new GUIs that we do not address in class.

We will use two MODFLOW GUIs in this class. It is important to note their different global approach to pre-processing the data.

First we will use Ground Water Vistas (GWV) which was developed by Jim Rumbaugh of Environmental Simulations, Inc. This program allows you to design a grid, specify the properties through a variety of tools, execute MODFLOW and a number of associated models as well as view the results in a variety of formats, undertake trial-and-error calibration by viewing various output items and use the universal calibration codes PEST and UCODE in a limited manner. Other GUIs that have similar features to GWV are Visual MODFLOW which was developed by Waterloo Hydrogeologic Software, PMWIN developed by Wen-Hsing Chiang of the University of the Free State in South Africa, and MODIME developed by S.S. Papadopulos & Associates.

If you do not have Ground Water Vistas (GWV) on your computer, then please install the student version from here (warning ~97Mb! GWVFull4.0) or ask me for CD. Once it is installed, download the GWV Upgrade into your GWV directory and execute the upgrade file to setup the most up to date student version of GWV. This version is fully functional for small models.


Each GUI has its own way of specifying items that one must learn to use them, but all of these GUIs perform the same basic functions. All of them can import standard MODFLOW files created as described in the original USGS manual.

The second GUI that you could use is the Ground Water Modeling System (GMS) which was developed by Norm Jones of Brigham Young University. This program allows the same activities as indicated above for GWV with some additional features. The reason that I also include GMS is that it has additional features that the other codes do not have. GMS includes more codes, being not only a GUI for MODFLOW and its associated codes, but also for a variety of other codes. However, the key difference in GMS is that the user can develop a conceptual model independent of the model grid. The conceptual model can be built as an overlay on maps of the area and is defined in terms of GIS objects. The user can quickly change the grid and all the details of the conceptual model are transferred to the new grid. For example, I may have a grid cell that overlays the intersection of three recharge zones and includes a river reach. GMS will translate this information to the model grid as one recharge rate for the cell that is the sum of the proportion of each contributing area times its recharge rate and it will take the length of the river reach and multiply by the conductance that was associated with the arc representing the river. In the other GUIs, the user would either have to force the grid cells to coincide with the recharge boundaries or would have to manual calculate the net recharge. The user would also manually calculate the conductance of the river for that cell. Later if the user defines a finer, or coarser, grid, GMS automatically recalculates the recharge for each cell based on the new proportional areas and calculates a new conductance based on the length of the river over lying the new cell. When using another GUI, the user would have to manually recalculate these values.

If you do not have the Ground Water Modeling System (GMS) on your computer, then please download it now from Ground Water Modeling System Download and install it on your computer. Then begin the registration process by sending the security string to me epoeter@mines.edu.
Go to File>Register and e-mail the security string to me. I will get a password and e-mail it back to you. Then you return to File>Register, enter the password, depress Register Password, and select Done.

* The OBJECTIVE of UNIT 10 is for you to:

* BE ABLE TO USE GUIs TO PRE and POST-PROCESS MODFLOW INPUT AND OUTPUT

* BE ABLE TO ACCESS AND MANIPULATE THE FILES THAT THE GUI PRODUCES

* UNDERSTAND THE FUNDAMENTAL DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A GUI THAT ALLOWS YOU TO PROCESS THE FILES AND ONE THAT BUILDS FILES FROM A CONCEPTUAL MODEL

* APPLY KNOWLEDGE GAINED IN THIS STUDY TO CONDUCT A PROJECT


DISCUSSION

Graphical User Interfaces (GUI's) facilitate data input and output to ground-water models.

This discussion of GUIs provides a limited illustration of their capabilities and use.
GUI MAIN PAGE


EXERCISES

Read the GV Concepts Chapter in the GroundWater Vistas Manual.

Look through the GMS reference manual (refman30.pdf) and tutorial (tutor30.pdf) so you will know where to find help on specific items when you need it.


COMMUNICATION

Please bring up any questions you may have about GUIs. epoeter@mines.edu


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