Definition of Hydrologic Response Units in Depression Plagued Digital Elevation Models
Abstract
Definition of hydrologic response units using digital elevation models (DEMs) is sensitive to the occurrence of topographic depressions. Real depressions can be important to the hydrology and biogeochemistry a catchment, often coinciding with areas of surface saturation. Artifact depressions, in contrast, result in digital "black holes", artificially truncating the hydrologic flow lengths and altering hydrologic flow directions, parameters that are often used in defining hydrologic response units. Artifact depressions must be removed from DEMs prior to definition of hydrologic response units. Depression filling or depression trenching techniques can be used to remove these artifacts. Depression trenching methods are often considered more appropriate because they preserve the topographic variability within a depression thus avoiding the creation of spurious flat areas. Current trenching algorithms are relatively slow and unable to process very large or noisy DEMs. A new trenching algorithm that overcomes these limitations is described. The algorithm does not require finding depression catchments or outlets, nor does it need special handling for nested depressions. Therefore, artifacts can be removed from large or noisy DEMs efficiently, while minimizing the number of grid elevations requiring modification. The resulting trench is a monotonically descending path starting from the lowest point in a depression, passing through the depression's outlet, and ending at a point of lower elevation outside the depression. The importance of removing artifact depressions is demonstrated by showing hydrologic response units both before and after the removal of artifact depressions from the DEM.
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2002
- Bibcode:
- 2002AGUFM.H21F..09L
- Keywords:
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- 1848 Networks;
- 1894 Instruments and techniques