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{{Presenters presentation
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|CSDMS meeting abstract presentation=The National Hydrologic Model (NHM) was developed to support coordinated, comprehensive, and consistent hydrologic modeling at multiple scales for the conterminous United States. The NHM development has been driven for the past decade by specific applications to meet stakeholder needs for accessible, adaptable surface water models that address local hydrologic modeling needs. NHM-based applications provide information to scientists, water resource managers, and the public to support advanced scientific inquiry and effective decision-making. The NHM infrastructure supports the execution of the Monthly Water Balance Model (NHM-MWBM) and the daily Precipitation Runoff Modeling System (NHM-PRMS). The NHM-PRMS balances all components of the water budget and can include simulation of stream temperature. Complete local models can be subset from the NHM-PRMS, then adapted and applied with local expertise to address stakeholder needs, providing nationally-consistent, locally informed, stakeholder relevant results. The NHM represents an opportunity for collaboration in the hydrologic community.
|CSDMS meeting abstract presentation=The National Hydrologic Model (NHM) was developed to support coordinated, comprehensive, and consistent hydrologic modeling at multiple scales for the conterminous United States. The NHM development has been driven for the past decade by specific applications to meet stakeholder needs for accessible, adaptable surface water models that address local hydrologic modeling needs. NHM-based applications provide information to scientists, water resource managers, and the public to support advanced scientific inquiry and effective decision-making. The NHM infrastructure supports the execution of the Monthly Water Balance Model (NHM-MWBM) and the daily Precipitation Runoff Modeling System (NHM-PRMS). The NHM-PRMS balances all components of the water budget and can include simulation of stream temperature. Complete local models can be subset from the NHM-PRMS, then adapted and applied with local expertise to address stakeholder needs, providing nationally-consistent, locally informed, stakeholder relevant results. The NHM represents an opportunity for collaboration in the hydrologic community.
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Latest revision as of 07:25, 27 May 2019

CSDMS3.0 - Bridging Boundaries


The National Hydrologic Model: coordinated, comprehensive, and consistent hydrologic modeling at multiple scales for the conterminous United States



Lauren Hay

USGS, United States
lhay@usgs.gov


Abstract
The National Hydrologic Model (NHM) was developed to support coordinated, comprehensive, and consistent hydrologic modeling at multiple scales for the conterminous United States. The NHM development has been driven for the past decade by specific applications to meet stakeholder needs for accessible, adaptable surface water models that address local hydrologic modeling needs. NHM-based applications provide information to scientists, water resource managers, and the public to support advanced scientific inquiry and effective decision-making. The NHM infrastructure supports the execution of the Monthly Water Balance Model (NHM-MWBM) and the daily Precipitation Runoff Modeling System (NHM-PRMS). The NHM-PRMS balances all components of the water budget and can include simulation of stream temperature. Complete local models can be subset from the NHM-PRMS, then adapted and applied with local expertise to address stakeholder needs, providing nationally-consistent, locally informed, stakeholder relevant results. The NHM represents an opportunity for collaboration in the hydrologic community.



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Of interest for:
  • Terrestrial Working Group
  • Education and Knowledge Transfer (EKT) Working Group
  • Hydrology Focus Research Group
  • Human Dimensions Focus Research Group