Abstract
Groundwater is critical in sustaining streamflow, especially in
headwater catchments, because of its ability to supply baseflow. In
water-limited arid and semi-arid mountain environments, the need to
characterize groundwater recharge and discharge has grown in tandem with
demands to manage current and future water resources. However, studying
groundwater in complex terrain is challenging due to limited field
measurements. Nearly a decade of monitoring in Gordon Gulch in the
Colorado Front Range provides an opportunity to study such an
environment. The field data is used to parameterize and calibrate a
groundwater flow model (MODFLOW-NWT). Model results reveal that
groundwater is recharged primarily during one to two recharge periods
each year, driven by spring snowmelt coupled with rain or by
intense/prolonged summer rain. Gordon Gulch is a net gaining stream,
with greater fluxes from groundwater to stream in lower Gordon Gulch and
during springtime. Groundwater is discharged to the stream via long,
deep flowpaths sourced from upper Gordon Gulch and from hillslopes, and
via short, shallow flowpaths in lower Gordon Gulch. Modelled groundwater
accounts for approximately 16 to 34% of baseflow in the stream. Using
Gordon Gulch as a case study, this model and data analysis contribute to
a larger effort to understand and constrain the mechanisms driving
groundwater recharge and groundwater-stream exchanges in semi-arid,
headwater catchments.