Temperature Normalized Enhanced Vegetation Index for Dixie Valley, Churchill County, Nevada

With increasing population growth and land-use change, urban communities in the desert southwest are progressively looking to remote basins to supplement existing water supplies. Recent applications for groundwater appropriations from Dixie Valley, Nevada, a primarily undeveloped basin neighboring the Carson Desert to the east, have prompted a reevaluation of the quantity of naturally discharging groundwater.The objective of this study was to develop a new, independent estimate of groundwater discharge by evapotranspiration (ET) from Dixie Valley using a combination of eddy-covariance evapotranspiration measurements and multispectral satellite imagery. Mean annual groundwater ET (ETg) was estimated during October 2009-2011 at four eddy covariance sites. Two sites were located in phreatophytic shrubland dominated by greasewood and two were located on a playa. Estimates were scaled to the basin level by combining remotely sensed imagery with field reconnaissance and site-scale ETg estimates.The Enhanced Vegetation Index (EVI) was calculated for 10 Landsat 5 Thematic mapper scenes and combined with brightness temperature in an effort to reduce confounding (high) EVI values resulting from forbes and cheat grass in sparsely vegetated areas, and biological soil crusts from bare soil to densely vegetated areas. The resulting EVI/TB images represented by this dataset were used to calculate ET units and scale actual and potential ETg to the basin level.

Data and Resources

Field Value
accessLevel public
bureauCode {010:12}
catalog_@context https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema/catalog.jsonld
catalog_conformsTo https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema
catalog_describedBy https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema/catalog.json
identifier USGS:7eae176b-67a7-425f-b4dc-fe9330a9bf5e
metadata_type geospatial
modified 20201117
old-spatial -118.161709, 39.627368, -117.583859, 40.155704
publisher U.S. Geological Survey
publisher_hierarchy Department of the Interior > U.S. Geological Survey
resource-type Dataset
source_datajson_identifier true
source_hash d8aa306e32cd591893636b4835acd1c396d96e2c
source_schema_version 1.1
spatial {"type": "Polygon", "coordinates": [[[-118.161709, 39.627368], [-118.161709, 40.155704], [ -117.583859, 40.155704], [ -117.583859, 39.627368], [-118.161709, 39.627368]]]}
theme {geospatial}
Groups
  • AmeriGEOSS
  • National Provider
  • North America
Tags
  • amerigeo
  • amerigeoss
  • churchill-county
  • ckan
  • dixie-valley
  • environment
  • et
  • et-unit
  • evaporation
  • evapotranspiration
  • geo
  • geoscientificinformation
  • geoss
  • great-basin
  • groundwater
  • groundwater-discharge
  • inlandwaters
  • national
  • nevada
  • north-america
  • pershing-county
  • phreatophyte
  • transpiration
  • united-states
  • usgs-7eae176b-67a7-425f-b4dc-fe9330a9bf5e
isopen False
license_id notspecified
license_title License not specified
maintainer U.S. Geological Survey Nevada Water Science Center
maintainer_email mierardi@usgs.gov
metadata_created 2025-11-21T13:42:28.532373
metadata_modified 2025-11-21T13:42:28.532377
notes With increasing population growth and land-use change, urban communities in the desert southwest are progressively looking to remote basins to supplement existing water supplies. Recent applications for groundwater appropriations from Dixie Valley, Nevada, a primarily undeveloped basin neighboring the Carson Desert to the east, have prompted a reevaluation of the quantity of naturally discharging groundwater.The objective of this study was to develop a new, independent estimate of groundwater discharge by evapotranspiration (ET) from Dixie Valley using a combination of eddy-covariance evapotranspiration measurements and multispectral satellite imagery. Mean annual groundwater ET (ETg) was estimated during October 2009-2011 at four eddy covariance sites. Two sites were located in phreatophytic shrubland dominated by greasewood and two were located on a playa. Estimates were scaled to the basin level by combining remotely sensed imagery with field reconnaissance and site-scale ETg estimates.The Enhanced Vegetation Index (EVI) was calculated for 10 Landsat 5 Thematic mapper scenes and combined with brightness temperature in an effort to reduce confounding (high) EVI values resulting from forbes and cheat grass in sparsely vegetated areas, and biological soil crusts from bare soil to densely vegetated areas. The resulting EVI/TB images represented by this dataset were used to calculate ET units and scale actual and potential ETg to the basin level.
num_resources 2
num_tags 25
title Temperature Normalized Enhanced Vegetation Index for Dixie Valley, Churchill County, Nevada