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Applications of GIS to Water Resources Engineering Francisco Olivera Department of Civil Engineering Texas A&M University Department of Civil Engineering.

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Presentation on theme: "Applications of GIS to Water Resources Engineering Francisco Olivera Department of Civil Engineering Texas A&M University Department of Civil Engineering."— Presentation transcript:

1 Applications of GIS to Water Resources Engineering Francisco Olivera Department of Civil Engineering Texas A&M University Department of Civil Engineering - Seminar September 12, 2001 – College Station, Texas

2 Geographic Information Systems

3 The Problem zTo analyze hydrologic processes in a non- uniform landscape. zNon-uniformity of the terrain involves the topography, land use and soils, and consequently affects the hydrologic properties of the flow paths. Watershed divide Watershed point Flow path Watershed outlet Opportunity

4 The Solutions zLumped models: Easy to implement, but do not account for terrain variability. zSpatially-distributed models: Require sophisticated tools to implement, but account for terrain variability.

5 Overview zSoil Water Balance zFlow Routing Methods zResults

6 Soil Water Balance Model Precipitation: P Evaporation: E Soil moisture: w Surplus: S Temperature: T Net Radiation: R n

7 Soil Water Balance Model Given: w fc : soil field capacity (mm) w pwp : soil permanent wilting point (mm) P : precipitation (mm) T : temperature (°C) R n : net radiation (W/m 2 ) Evaporation: Soil moisture and surplus: Calculated: w : actual soil moisture (mm) S : water surplus (mm) E : actual evaporation (mm) E p : potential evaporation (mm)

8 Global Data Precipitation and temperature data, at 0.5° resolution, by D. Legates and C. Willmott of the University of Delaware. Net radiation data, at 2.5° resolution, by the Earth Radiation Budget Experiment (ERBR). Soil water holding capacity, at a 0.5° resolution, by Dunne and Willmott. Precipitation (Jan.)Temperature (Jan.) Net Radiation (Jan.)Soil Water Holding Capacity

9 Monthly Surplus – Niger Basin February May August November Period between storms: 3 days.

10 Monthly Surplus – Niger Basin 10 days between storms 1 day between storms3 days between storms 30 days between storms Effect of disaggregation of monthly precipitation into multiple storms.

11 Overview zSoil Water Balance zFlow Routing Methods zResults

12 Flow Routing Models zCell-to-cell zElement-to-element zSource to sink Source Flow-path Sink Cell Sub-Basin Junction Reach Sink

13 Cell-to-Cell Model zSets a mesh of cells on the terrain and establishes their connectivity. zRepresents each cell as a linear reservoir (outflow proportional to storage). One parameter per cell: residence time in the cell. zFlow is routed from cell-to-cell and hydrographs are calculated at each cell. K1K1 K2K2 K3K3 K4K4 K5K5

14 Mesh of Cells zCongo River basin subdivided into cells by a 2.8125°  2.8125° mesh. zWith this resolution, 69 cells were defined.

15 Low Resolution River Network zLow resolution river networks determined from high resolution hydrographic data. B C D 12 3 A 4

16 Low Resolution River Network zHigh resolution flow directions (1-Km DEM cells) are used to define low resolution river network (0.5° cells).

17 Cell Length zThe cell length is calculated as the length of the flow path that runs from the cell outlet to the receiving cell outlet. B C D 12 3 A 4

18 Element-to-Element Model zDefines hydrologic elements (basins, reaches, junctions, reservoirs, diversions, sources and sinks) and their topology. zElements are attributed with hydrologic parameters extracted from GIS spatial data. zFlow is routed from element-to- element and hydrographs are calculated at all elements. zDifferent flow routing options are available for each hydrologic element type. Sub-Basin Junction Reach Sink Sub-Basin

19 Sub-Basins and Reaches zCongo River basin subdivided into sub-basins and reaches. zSub-basins and reaches delineated from digital elevation models (1 Km resolution). zStreams drain more than 50,000 Km 2. Sub-basin were defined for each stream segment.

20 Hydrologic System Schematic zHydrologic system schematic of the Congo River basin as displayed by HEC-HMS.

21 Hydrologic System Schematic zDetail of the schematic of the Congo River basin.

22 Delineated Streams

23 Guadalquivir Basin

24 HMS Schematic of the Guadalquivir Basin

25 Source-to-Sink Model zDefines sources where surplus enters the surface water system, and sinks where surplus leaves the surface water system. zFlow is routed from the sources directly to the sinks, and hydrographs are calculated at the sinks only. zA response function is used to represent the motion of water from the sources to the sinks. Source Flow-path Sink Source Flow-path

26 Sinks zSinks are defined at the continental margin and at the pour points of the inland catchments. zUsing a 3°x3° mesh, 132 sinks were identified for the African continent (including inland catchments like Lake Chad).

27 Drainage Area of the Sinks zThe drainage area of each sink is delineated using raster- based GIS functions applied to a 1-Km DEM (GTOPO30). GTOPO30 has been developed by the EROS Data Center of the USGS, Sioux Falls, ND.

28 Land Boxes zLand boxes capture the geomorphology of the hydrologic system. zA 0.5°x0.5° mesh is used to subdivide the terrain into land boxes. zFor the Congo River basin, 1379 land boxes were identified.

29 Surplus Boxes zSurplus boxes are associated to a surplus time series. zSurplus data has been calculated using NCAR’s CCM3.2 GCM model over a 2.8125° x 2.8125° mesh. zFor the Congo River basin, 69 surplus boxes were identified.

30 Sources zSources are obtained by intersecting: ydrainage area of the sinks yland boxes ysurplus boxes zNumber of sources: yCongo River basin: 1,954 yAfrican continent: 19,170

31 Response Function zPure translation zTranslation, flow attenuation, dispersion and decay Q sink =   Q i =   [ I i (t) * U i (t) ] Source - i Flow-path - i Sink  (t) U i (t) t t  (t) t U i (t) t

32 Overview zSoil Water Balance zFlow Routing Methods zResults

33 Global Monthly Surplus Animation prepared by Kwabena Asante

34 Global River Network

35 Hydrographs - Congo River Runoff Flow

36 Hydrographs - Amazon River Runoff Flow

37 Watershed Geomorphology V = 1 m/s D = 150 m 2 /s Niger River Basin: A = 2’260,000 Km 2, B = 226 Km 2, and C = 22,600 m 2.

38 Flooding t.u. Campus Animation prepared by Esteban Azagra

39 Flooding t.u. Campus Animation prepared by Esteban Azagra


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