Catchment hydrology: Difference between revisions
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<math>P - R = ET</math>.<ref>Kendall and McDonnell, 1998. Isotope Tracers in Catchment Hydrology. Elsevier</ref> |
<math>P - R = ET</math>.<ref>Kendall and McDonnell, 1998. Isotope Tracers in Catchment Hydrology. Elsevier</ref> |
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(For more information see [[water balance]] |
(For more information see [[water balance]]) |
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==Terminology== |
==Terminology== |
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Catchment hydrology, is the study of the hydrology regarding catchments.
Water balance
Catchment hydrology is based on the principal of continuity, which is used to perform a water balance on a catchment:
,
where = inputs (P, precipitation + OW, occult water), = outputs (ET, evapotranspiration + R, runoff), and = the change in catchment storage over time.
Neglecting the minor inputs of occult water, the water balance can be revised to
.
Finally, considering a catchment on a long time scale, typically a year or more, removes the storage component from the equation:
.[1]
(For more information see water balance)
Terminology
There are many terms involved with and related to catchment hydrology. These basic ones are taken from the glossary of terms in Kendall and McDonnell, 1998:
- aquifer
- baseflow
- catchment
- drainage divide
- evaporation
- evapotranspiration
- event water
- groundwater flow
- Horton flow
- hydrograph
- infiltration
- intensity
- interception
- overland flow
- pre-event water
- subsurface runoff
- subsurface stormflow
- surface runoff
- time of concentration
- transpiration
References
- ^ Kendall and McDonnell, 1998. Isotope Tracers in Catchment Hydrology. Elsevier