Hydrologic Analysis

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Hydrologic Analysis Francisco Olivera, Ph.D., P.E. Srikanth Koka Department of Civil Engineering Texas A&M University

description

Hydrologic Analysis. Francisco Olivera, Ph.D., P.E. Srikanth Koka Department of Civil Engineering Texas A&M University. Watershed Delineation. Watershed delineation is the process of identifying the drainage area of a point. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Hydrologic Analysis

Page 1: Hydrologic Analysis

Hydrologic Analysis

Francisco Olivera, Ph.D., P.E.Srikanth Koka

Department of Civil EngineeringTexas A&M University

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Watershed Delineation

Watershed delineation is the process of identifying the drainage area of a point.

For many years, Civil Engineers have been using USGS paper maps for watershed delineation.

The maps are in Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM) coordinates and in 1:24,000 scale.

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Watershed Delineation

Water flows in the direction of the terrain steepest downhill slope. Streamlines (blue arrows) are orthogonal to the contour lines.

Drainage divides (red line) are found along the highest points of the terrain.

Streamlines do not flow towards drainage divides, and do not intersect them.

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DEMs

Digital Elevation Models (DEMs) are grids of elevation.

DEMs store the same type of information contour lines do, but with a different data structure.

Watershed delineation can be based on DEMs rather than contour lines.

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30-Meter DEMs

For the United States, 30-meter DEMs have been developed by USGS.

30-meter DEMs are consistent with 1:24,000 paper maps.

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30-Meter DEMs

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30-Meter DEMs

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30m ~ 90m

30-Meter and 3" DEMs

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Hydrologic Functions

Flow direction codes

The eight-direction pour point algorithm (D-8) assigns a flow direction code to each cell, based on the steepest downhill slope as defined by the DEM.

The flow direction code indicates the cell – out of the eight neighbor cells – towards which the water flows.

Flow direction cannot be defined for cells within a terrain depression. DEMs have to be filled before determining flow directions.

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Hydrologic Functions

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Hydrologic Functions

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DEM Flow direction grid Flow network(not a grid)

Function: Flow directionArgument: DEM

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DEM

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Flow Direction

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Hydrologic Functions

Function: Flow accumulationArgument: Flow direction

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DEM Flow network(not a grid)

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Flow accumulation grid

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Flow Accumulation

Flow accumulation is a measure of the drainage area in units of grid cells.

The cell itself is not included.

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Hydrologic Functions

DEM Flow accumulation(> 2 cells)

Process: Stream delineationArgument: Flow accumulation

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Stream Network

All grid cells draining more than a user-defined threshold value are part of the stream network.

Red streams correspond to a lower threshold than the blue streams.

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DEM Delineated streams Streams links

Hydrologic Functions

Function: Stream linksArgument: Delineated streams

Stream links are assigned an identification number randomly.

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Stream links

Stream links are the segments of a stream channel connecting two successive junctions, a junction and an outlet, or a headwater and a junction.

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DEM Streams links Outlets

Hydrologic Functions

Process: OutletsArgument: Stream links

Outlets are assigned the identification number of their link.

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Watershed Outlets

The most downstream cells of the stream segments (yellow/brown cells) are watershed outlets.

User-defined points (red dots) are also watershed outlets.

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Modified Stream Links

User-defined outlets modify the stream links by subdividing the segment in which they are located into two segments.

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DEM Outlets Watersheds

Hydrologic Functions

Function: WatershedArgument: Flow direction and Outlets

Watersheds are assigned the identification number of their outlet.

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Watershed Delineation

The drainage area of each watershed outlet is delineated.

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Raster to Vector Conversion

The grids of stream links and watersheds are vectorized to obtain stream line and watershed polygon feature classes.

Both feature classes include a field Grid-Code in their attribute tables, which stores the stream link and watershed identification number.

Since the identification number of the streams and their corresponding watershed is the same, the attribute tables can be related.

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Merging Watersheds

Adjacent watershed polygons can be merged into a single polygon, if they share their outlet or one flows into the other.