Hyperresolution global land surface modeling: Meeting a grand challenge for monitoring Earth's terrestrial water

Monitoring Earth's terrestrial water conditions is critically important to many hydrological applications such as global food production; assessing water resources sustainability; and flood, drought, and climate change prediction. These needs have motivated the development of pilot monitoring and prediction systems for terrestrial hydrologic and vegetative states, but to date only at the rather coarse spatial resolutions (∼ 10-100 km) over continental to global domains. Adequately addressing critical water cycle science questions and applications requires systems that are implemented globally at much higher resolutions, on the order of 1 km, resolutions referred to as hyperresolution in the context of global land surface models. This opinion paper sets forth the needs and benefits for a system that would monitor and predict the Earth's terrestrial water, energy, and biogeochemical cycles. We discuss six major challenges in developing a system: improved representation of surface-subsurface interactions due to fine-scale topography and vegetation; improved representation of land-atmospheric interactions and resulting spatial information on soil moisture and evapotranspiration; inclusion of water quality as part of the biogeochemical cycle; representation of human impacts from water management; utilizing massively parallel computer systems and recent computational advances in solving hyperresolution models that will have up to 10(9) unknowns; and developing the required in situ and remote sensing global data sets. We deem the development of a global hyperresolution model for monitoring the terrestrial water, energy, and biogeochemical cycles a "grand challenge to the community, and we call upon the international hydrologic community and the hydrological science support infrastructure to endorse the effort.

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Copyright 2011 American Geophysical Union.


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Author Wood, E.
Roundy, J.
Troy, T.
van Beek, L.
Bierkens, M.
Blyth, E.
de Roo, A.
Döll, P.
Ek, M.
Famiglietti, J.
Gochis, David
van de Giesen, N.
Houser, P.
Jaffé, P.
Kollet, S.
Lehner, B.
Lettenmaier, D.
Peters-Lidard, C.
Sivapalan, M.
Sheffield, J.
Wade, A.
Whitehead, P.
Publisher UCAR/NCAR - Library
Publication Date 2011-05-06T00:00:00
Digital Object Identifier (DOI) Not Assigned
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Topic Category geoscientificInformation
Progress N/A
Metadata Date 2025-07-17T14:47:55.197966
Metadata Record Identifier edu.ucar.opensky::articles:11592
Metadata Language eng; USA
Suggested Citation Wood, E., Roundy, J., Troy, T., van Beek, L., Bierkens, M., Blyth, E., de Roo, A., Döll, P., Ek, M., Famiglietti, J., Gochis, David, van de Giesen, N., Houser, P., Jaffé, P., Kollet, S., Lehner, B., Lettenmaier, D., Peters-Lidard, C., Sivapalan, M., Sheffield, J., Wade, A., Whitehead, P.. (2011). Hyperresolution global land surface modeling: Meeting a grand challenge for monitoring Earth's terrestrial water. UCAR/NCAR - Library. https://n2t.org/ark:/85065/d7cj8f2c. Accessed 02 August 2025.

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