Title: Applications of GIS to Water Resources Engineering
1Applications of GIS toWater Resources Engineering
Texas AM University Department of Civil
Engineering - SeminarSeptember 12, 2001
College Station, Texas
- Francisco Olivera
- Department of Civil Engineering
- Texas AM University
2Geographic Information Systems
Where in the world?
3The Problem
Opportunity
- To analyze hydrologic processes in a non-uniform
landscape. - Non-uniformity of the terrain involves the
topography, land use and soils, and consequently
affects the hydrologic properties of the flow
paths.
Watershed point
Flow path
Watershed divide
Watershed outlet
4The Solutions
- Spatially-distributed models Require
sophisticated tools to implement, but account for
terrain variability.
- Lumped models Easy to implement, but do not
account for terrain variability.
5Overview
- Soil Water Balance
- Flow Routing Methods
- Results
6Soil Water Balance Model
7Soil Water Balance Model
Evaporation
Given wfc soil field capacity (mm) wpwp soil
permanent wilting point (mm) P precipitation
(mm) T temperature (C) Rn net radiation
(W/m2)
Soil moisture and surplus
Calculated w actual soil moisture (mm) S
water surplus (mm) E actual evaporation (mm) Ep
potential evaporation (mm)
8Global Data
Precipitation (Jan.)
Temperature (Jan.)
Net Radiation (Jan.)
Soil Water Holding Capacity
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.
9Monthly Surplus Niger Basin
Period between storms 3 days.
10Monthly Surplus Niger Basin
Effect of disaggregation of monthly precipitation
into multiple storms.
11Overview
- Soil Water Balance
- Flow Routing Methods
- Results
12Flow Routing Models
Cell
Cell
- Cell-to-cell
- Element-to-element
- Source to sink
Sub-Basin
Reach
Junction
Sink
13Cell-to-Cell Model
- Sets a mesh of cells on the terrain and
establishes their connectivity. - Represents each cell as a linear reservoir
(outflow proportional to storage). One parameter
per cell residence time in the cell. - Flow is routed from cell-to-cell and hydrographs
are calculated at each cell.
14Mesh of Cells
- Congo River basin subdivided into cells by a
2.8125 ? 2.8125 mesh. - With this resolution, 69 cells were defined.
15Low Resolution River Network
- Low resolution river networks determined from
high resolution hydrographic data.
16Low Resolution River Network
- High resolution flow directions (1-Km DEM cells)
are used to define low resolution river network
(0.5 cells).
17Cell Length
1
2
- The cell length is calculated as the length of
the flow path that runs from the cell outlet to
the receiving cell outlet.
B
A
3
4
C
D
18Element-to-Element Model
- Defines hydrologic elements (basins, reaches,
junctions, reservoirs, diversions, sources and
sinks) and their topology. - Elements are attributed with hydrologic
parameters extracted from GIS spatial data. - Flow is routed from element-to-element and
hydrographs are calculated at all elements. - Different flow routing options are available for
each hydrologic element type.
19Sub-Basins and Reaches
- Congo River basin subdivided into sub-basins and
reaches. - Sub-basins and reaches delineated from digital
elevation models (1 Km resolution). - Streams drain more than 50,000 Km2. Sub-basin
were defined for each stream segment.
20Hydrologic System Schematic
- Hydrologic system schematic of the Congo River
basin as displayed by HEC-HMS.
21Hydrologic System Schematic
- Detail of the schematic of the Congo River basin.
22Delineated Streams
23Guadalquivir Basin
24HMS Schematic of theGuadalquivir Basin
25Source-to-Sink Model
- Defines sources where surplus enters the surface
water system, and sinks where surplus leaves the
surface water system. - Flow is routed from the sources directly to the
sinks, and hydrographs are calculated at the
sinks only. - A response function is used to represent the
motion of water from the sources to the sinks.
Source
Flow-path
Source
Sink
Flow-path
26Sinks
- Sinks are defined at the continental margin and
at the pour points of the inland catchments. - Using a 3x3 mesh, 132 sinks were identified for
the African continent (including inland
catchments like Lake Chad).
27Drainage Area of the Sinks
- The 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.
28Land Boxes
- Land boxes capture the geomorphology of the
hydrologic system. - A 0.5x0.5 mesh is used to subdivide the terrain
into land boxes. - For the Congo River basin, 1379 land boxes were
identified.
29Surplus Boxes
- Surplus boxes are associated to a surplus time
series. - Surplus data has been calculated using NCARs
CCM3.2 GCM model over a 2.8125 x 2.8125 mesh. - For the Congo River basin, 69 surplus boxes were
identified.
30Sources
- Sources are obtained by intersecting
- drainage area of the sinks
- land boxes
- surplus boxes
- Number of sources
- Congo River basin 1,954
- African continent 19,170
31Response Function
?(t)
Sink
Flow-path - i
Ui(t)
Source - i
Ui(t)
?(t)
- Pure translation
- Translation, flow attenuation, dispersion and
decay
t
t
Qsink S Qi S Ii(t) Ui(t)
32Overview
- Soil Water Balance
- Flow Routing Methods
- Results
33Global Monthly Surplus
Animation prepared by Kwabena Asante
34Global River Network
35Hydrographs - Congo River
Flow
Runoff
36Hydrographs - Amazon River
Flow
Runoff
37Watershed Geomorphology
V 1 m/s D 150 m2/s
Niger River Basin A 2260,000 Km2, B 226
Km2, and C 22,600 m2.
38Flooding t.u. Campus
Animation prepared by Esteban Azagra
39Flooding t.u. Campus
Animation prepared by Esteban Azagra