catchment power and the joint distribution of elevation and travel distance to the outlet
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2016
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Abstract
The delivery of water, sediment, and solutes by catchments is
influenced by the distribution of source elevations and their travel
distances to the outlet. For example, elevation affects the magnitude and
phase of precipitation, as well as the climatic factors that govern rock
weathering, which influence the production rate and initial particle size of
sediments. Travel distance, in turn, affects the timing of flood peaks at
the outlet and the degree of sediment size reduction by wear, which affects
particle size distributions at the outlet. The distributions of elevation
and travel distance have been studied extensively but separately, as the
hypsometric curve and width function. Yet a catchment can be considered as a
collection of points, each with paired values of elevation and travel
distance. For every point, the ratio of elevation to travel distance defines
the mean slope for transport of mass to the outlet. Recognizing that mean
slope is proportional to the average rate of loss of potential energy by
water and sediment during transport to the outlet, we use the joint
distribution of elevation and travel distance to define two new metrics for
catchment geometry: "source-area power", and the corresponding
catchment-wide integral "catchment power". We explore patterns in
source-area and catchment power across three study catchments spanning a
range of relief and drainage area. We then develop an empirical algorithm
for generating synthetic source-area power distributions, which can be
parameterized with data from natural catchments. This new way of quantifying
the three-dimensional geometry of catchments can be used to explore the
effects of topography on the distribution on fluxes of water, sediment,
isotopes, and other landscape products passing through catchment outlets, and
may provide a fresh perspective on problems of both practical and
theoretical interest.
| Reference Key |
sklar2016earthcatchment
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| Authors | ;L. S. Sklar;C. S. Riebe;C. E. Lukens;D. Bellugi |
| Journal | experimental gerontology |
| Year | 2016 |
| DOI |
10.5194/esurf-4-799-2016
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| URL | |
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