• Title of article

    Deriving drainage networks and catchment boundaries: a new methodology combining digital elevation data and environmental characteristics

  • Author/Authors

    Vogt، نويسنده , , Jürgen V and Colombo، نويسنده , , Roberto and Bertolo، نويسنده , , Francesca، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
  • Pages
    18
  • From page
    281
  • To page
    298
  • Abstract
    Digital data on the position and characteristics of river networks and catchments are important for the analysis of pressures and impacts on water resources. GIS tools allow for the combined analysis of digital elevation data and environmental parameters in order to derive this kind of information. This article presents a new approach making use of medium-resolution digital elevation data (250-m grid cell size) and information on climate, vegetation cover, terrain morphology, soils and lithology to derive river networks and catchments over extended areas. eral, methods to extract channel networks at small scale use a constant threshold for the critical contributing area, independent of widely varying landscape conditions. As a consequence, the resulting drainage network does not reflect the natural variability in drainage density. To overcome this limitation, a classification of the landscape is proposed. The various data available are analysed in an integrated approach in order to characterise the terrain with respect to its ability to develop lower or higher drainage densities, resulting in five landscape types. For each landscape type, the slope–area relationship is then derived and the critical contributing area is determined. In the subsequent channel extraction, a dedicated critical contributing area threshold is used for each landscape type. scribed methodology has been developed and tested for the territory of Italy. Results have been validated comparing the derived data with river and catchment data sets from other sources and at varying scales. Good agreement both in terms of river superimposition and drainage density could be demonstrated.
  • Keywords
    Drainage network extraction , Catchment delineation , Landscape characterisation , Drainage density , Digital elevation data
  • Journal title
    Geomorphology
  • Serial Year
    2003
  • Journal title
    Geomorphology
  • Record number

    2358000