Groundwater Flow
Groundwater Flow
Filter Total Items: 61
RASA98
Documentation of Revisions to the Regional Aquifer System Analysis Model for the New Jersey Coastal Plain
Pennsauken
Simulation of Groundwater Flow in the Potomac-Raritan-Magothy Aquifer System, Pennsauken Township and Vicinity
Groundwater Mounding
Simulation of Groundwater Mounding beneath Hypothetical Stormwater Infiltration Basins
Salem-Gloucester
Simulated effects of allocated and projected 2025 withdrawals from the Potomac-Raritan-Magothy aquifer system, Gloucester and Northeastern Salem Counties, New Jersey
Great Egg-Mullica
Simulated Effects of Alternative Withdrawal Strategies on Groundwater Flow in the Unconfined Kirkwood-Cohansey Aquifer System, the Rio Grande Water-Bearing Zone, and the Atlantic City 800-Foot Sand in the Great Egg Harbor and Mullica River Basins, New Jersey
Southern Ocean
Simulated Effects of Groundwater withdrawals from Aquifers in Ocean County and Vicinity, New Jersey
Rockaway
Hydrogeology of, and Simulated Groundwater Flow, in the Valley-Fill Aquifers of the Upper Rockaway River Basin, Morris, New Jersey
Lamington
Hydrogeology of, and Groundwater Flow in, a Valley-Fill and Carbonate-Rock Aquifer System Near Long Valley in the New Jersey Highlands by Robert S. Nicholson, Steven D. McAuley, Julia L. Barringer, and Alison D. Gordon
Picatinny
Hydrogeology and Simulation of Groundwater Flow, Picatinny Arsenal and Vicinity, Morris County, New Jersey
Fair Lawn
Hydrogeologic Framework, Groundwater Quality, and Simulation of Groundwater Flow at the Fair Lawn Well Field Superfund Site, Bergen County, New Jersey
Simulation of groundwater flow and pathlines at NAWC NJ (2006)
Hydraulic and Solute-Transport Properties and Simulated Advective Transport of Contaminated Groundwater in a Fractured-Rock Aquifer at the Naval Air Warfare Center, West Trenton, New Jersey by Jean C. Lewis-Brown and Donald E. Rice
Evaluation of Water-Supply Issues
The NJ Coastal Plain RASA (Regional Aquifer System Analysis) model (in this document referred to simply as “the RASA model”) is one of the most widely used models by hydrologists in the NJWSC. This model was developed as part of the RASA program, which was started in 1978 after a congressional mandate to develop quantitative appraisals of the major groundwater systems of the United States.