Search

Search Results

University of Victoria Dataverse Logo
Borealis
Huggins, Xander; Gleeson, Tom; Villholth, Karen G.; Rocha, Juan C.; Famiglietti, James S. 2024-10-10 <strong> This repository consists of: </strong> <br> 1. The global groundwaterscape classification raster <br> 2. The groundwaterscape legend, with descriptions and attributes of each groundwaterscape <br> 3. The colour map to reproduce the groundwaterscape maps as shown in the associated paper <br> 4. An archive of the scripts used to perform all analysis, also located at the GitHub repository: <a href ="https://github.com/XanderHuggins/groundwaterscapes" target="_blank">https://github.com/XanderHuggins/groundwaterscapes</a><br> 5. A ReadMe file <br> <br> <strong> Associated paper's abstract: </strong> <br> Groundwater is a dynamic component of the global water cycle with important social, economic, ecological, and Earth system functions. We present a new global classification and mapping of groundwater systems, which we call groundwaterscapes, that represent predominant configurations of large-scale groundwater system functions. We identify and map 15 groundwaterscapes which offer a new lens to conceptualize, study, model, and manage groundwater. Groundwaterscapes are derived using a novel application of sequenced self-organizing maps that capture patterns in groundwater system functions at the grid cell level (~10 km), including groundwater-dependent ecosystem type and density, storage capacity, irrigation, safe drinking water access, and national governance. All large aquifer systems of the world are characterized by multiple groundwaterscapes, highlighting the pitfalls of treating these groundwater bodies as lumped systems in global assessments. We evaluate the distribution of Global Groundwater Monitoring Network wells across groundwaterscapes and find that industrial agricultural regions are disproportionately monitored, while several groundwaterscapes have next to no monitoring wells. This disparity undermines the ability to understand system dynamics across the full range of settings that characterize groundwater systems globally. We argue that groundwaterscapes offer a conceptual and spatial tool to guide model development, hypothesis testing, and future data collection initiatives to better understand groundwater’s embeddedness within social-ecological systems at the global scale.

Map search instructions

1.Turn on the map filter by clicking the “Limit by map area” toggle.
2.Move the map to display your area of interest. Holding the shift key and clicking to draw a box allows for zooming in on a specific area. Search results change as the map moves.
3.Access a record by clicking on an item in the search results or by clicking on a location pin and the linked record title.
Note: Clusters are intended to provide a visual preview of data location. Because there is a maximum of 50 records displayed on the map, they may not be a completely accurate reflection of the total number of search results.