نتایج جستجو برای: homag catchment

تعداد نتایج: 12245  

2013
P. A. Troch

Budyko (1974) postulated that long-term catchment water balance is controlled to first order by the available water and energy. This leads to the interesting question of how do landscape characteristics (soils, geology, vegetation) and climate properties (precipitation, potential evaporation, number of wet and dry days) interact at the catchment scale to produce such a simple and predictable ou...

2011
G. Carrillo P. A. Troch M. Sivapalan T. Wagener C. Harman

Catchment classification is an efficient method to synthesize our understanding of how climate variability and catchment characteristics interact to define hydrological response. One way to accomplish catchment classification is to empirically relate climate and catchment characteristics to hydrologic behavior and to quantify the skill of predicting hydrologic response based on the combination ...

2015
M. Holleran M. Levi

Quantifying catchment-scale soil property variation yields insights into critical zone evolution and function. The objective of this study was to quantify and predict the spatial distribution of soil properties within a high-elevation forested catchment in southern Arizona, USA, using a combined set of digital soil mapping (DSM) and sampling design techniques to quantify catchment-scale soil sp...

2011
C. Beverly M. Hocking

Terrain analysis based on digital elevation models is being routinely used in hydrological modelling. However, landscape connectivity enabling the routing of flow and nutrients from upslope landscape units to adjacent downslope landscape units within a sub watershed is not commonly incorporated into catchment scale models. This paper describes a process of generating connected landscape units w...

2009
J. Vaze F. H. S. Chiew J. Perraud D. A. Post J. Teng

Five lumped, conceptual rainfall-runoff models are calibrated for 240 gauged catchments in southeastern Australia. Climate input to the models is distributed at ~25 km grid cells and the catchments range in size from 50 to 2000 km. Each of the models is calibrated on each of the 240 catchments. Each catchment is then simulated using parameters sets calibrated for the nearest neighbouring catchm...

2010
ROBIN LECRAW ROBERT MACKERETH

1. Our objective was to investigate the associations between benthic macroinvertebrate communities and environmental factors described at three spatial scales: local, reach and catchment. Differences in these associations, because of local topography, were determined by categorising sites into those having a large or small ‘reach contributing area’ (RCA), which is the lateral area of land contr...

2007
K. Berkhoff

The main objective of the study presented in this paper was to develop an evaluation scheme which is suitable for spatially explicit groundwater vulnerability assessment according to the Water Framework Directive (WFD). Study area was the Hase river catchment, an area of about 3 000 km2 in north-west Germany which is dominated by livestock farming, in particular pig and poultry production. For ...

2005
B. Grayson

1 Co-operative Research Centre for Catchment Hydrology and the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Melbourne ([email protected], [email protected], [email protected]). 2 Co-operative Research Centre for Catchment Hydrology and the School of Anthropology, Geography and Environmental Studies, University of Melbourne (idruth@unimel...

2010
James W. Kirchner Doerthe Tetzlaff Chris Soulsby

Time series of chloride concentrations and oxygen-18 isotopic ratios are widely used for tracing catchment storage and mixing processes and for inferring catchment travel-time distributions. However, neither chloride nor oxygen-18 is an ideal hydrologic tracer: chloride concentrations in streamwater can be affected by dry deposition, evapoconcentration and biogeochemical cycling, and water isot...

2016
PAMELA L. SULLIVAN SCOTT A. HYNEK XIN GU KAMINI SINGHA TIMOTHY WHITE HYOJIN KIM BRIAN CLARKE ERIC KIRBY CHRISTOPHER DUFFY SUSAN L. BRANTLEY

The hydrologic connectivity between hillslopes and streams impacts the geomorphological evolution of catchments. Here, we propose a conceptual model for hydrogeomorphological evolution of the Susquehanna Shale Hills Critical Zone Observatory (SSHCZO), a first-order catchment developed on shale in central Pennsylvania, U.S.A. At SSHCZO, the majority of available water (the difference between inc...

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