P2 Flashcards

1
Q

The drainage basin water cycle

A
  • On a smaller scale (variable from regional to local, depending on the size of the drainage basin) the drainage basin is a subsystem within the global hydrological cycle.
  • It is an open system as it has external inputs and outputs that cause the amount of water in the basin to vary over time.
  • These variations can occur at different temporal scales, from short-term hourly through to daily, seasonal and annual
  • A drainage basin can be defined as the area of land drained by a river and its tributaries, and is frequently referred to as a river catchment.
  • The boundary of a drainage basin is defined by the watershed, which is usually a ridge of high land which divides and separates waters flowing to different rivers.
  • Drainage basins can be of any size, from that of a small stream possibly without tributaries up to a major international river flowing across borders of several countries.
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2
Q

Diagram of The drainage basin cycle

A
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3
Q

Catchment:

A

The area of land drained by a river and its tributaries.

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4
Q

Watershed:

A

The highland which divides and separates waters flowing to different rivers.

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5
Q

Precipitation
For precipitation (rain, snow, hail) to form, certain conditions are needed:

A

• air cooled to saturation point with a relative humidity of 100 per cent
• condensation nuclei, such as dust particles, to facilitate the growth of droplets in clouds
• a temperature below dew point.
There are three main triggers for the development of rainfall, all of which involve uplift and cooling and condensation (Figure 1.5).

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6
Q

As far as the impacts on the drainage basin hydrological system are concerned, there are six key influencing factors:

A

amount of precipitation,

type of precipitation

Seasonality.

Intensity of precipitation

Variability

The distribution of precipitation within a basin.

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7
Q

The amount of precipitation,

A

which can have a direct impact on drainage discharge: as a general rule, the higher the amount the less variability in its pattern.

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8
Q

The type of precipitation

A

rain, snow or hail): the formation of snow, for example, can act as a temporary store and large fluxes (flows) of water can be released into the system after a period of rapid melting resulting from a thaw.

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9
Q

Seasonality.

A

In some climates, such as monsoon, Mediterranean or continental climates, strong seasonal patterns of rainfall or snowfall will have a major impact on the physical processes operating in the drainage basin system.

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10
Q

Intensity of precipitation

A

has a major impact on flows on or below the surface. It is difficult for rainfall to infiltrate if it is very intense, as the soil capacity is exceeded.

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11
Q

Variability can be seen in three ways:

A

• Secular variability happens long term, for example as a result of climate change trends.
• Periodic variability happens in an annual, seasonal, monthly or diurnal context.
• Stochastic variability results from random factors, for example in the localisation of a thunderstorm within a basin.

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12
Q

The distribution of precipitation within a basin.

A
  • The impact is particularly noticeable in very large basins such as the Rhone or the Nile, where tributaries start in different climatic zones.
  • At a local scale and shorter time scale the location of a thunderstorm within a small river basin can have a major impact temporarily as inputs will vary, with contrasting
    storm hydrographs for different stream tributaries.
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13
Q

Convectional rainfall

A

This type of rainfall is common in tropical areas, and in the UK during the summer. When the land becomes hot, the air above it becomes warmer, expands and rises. As it rises, the air cools and its ability to hold water vapour decreases. Condensation occurs and clouds develop. If the air continues to rise, rain will fall.

1 The Earth’s hot surface heats the air above it
2 Rain - The heated air rises, expands and cools; condensation takes place
3 Rising warm air - Further ascent causes more expansion and more cooling: rain takes place
4 Cool air descends and replaces the warm air

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14
Q

Cyclonic rainfall

A

This happens when warm air, which is lighter and less dense, is forced to rise over cold, denser air. As it rises, the air cools and its ability to hold water vapour decreases. Condensation occurs and clouds and rain form.

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15
Q

Orographic rainfall

A

When air is forced to rise over a barrier, such as a mountain, it cools and condensation takes place forming rain. The leeward (downwind) slope receives relatively little rain, which is known as the rain shadow effect.

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16
Q

Precipitation data

A
  • It is important to recognise that data on precipitation may not always be reliable.
  • In the UK, 200 automated weather stations spaced about 40 km apart continuously collect precipitation data.
  • In the semi-arid Sahel countries of Mali, Chad and Burkina Faso roughly 35 weather stations collect data across an area of 2.8 million square kilometres (more than 10 times the area of the UK).
  • Major storms can easily fall between these weather stations because rainfall is geographically patchy, especially when it is non-frontal.
  • Understanding rainfall patterns and trends is critical in semi-arid areas but data reliability in these regions is often low.
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17
Q

Rain shadow

A
  • A rain shadow is a dry area on the leeward (downwind) side of the mountain.
  • It receives little rainfall as the mountains shelter it from rain-producing weather systems.
  • As the moist air is forced to rise on the windward side of the mountain, rainfall occurs as a result of adiabatic cooling (when the volume or air increases but there is no addition of heat), and condensation to dew point.
  • The air, without much water left in it, is then drawn over the mountains where it descends and is adiabatically warmed by compression.
  • This leads to a very dry ‘shadow’ area, for example, the Owens Valley is in the rain shadow of the Sierra Nevada range in California.
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18
Q

Interception

A
  • Interception is the process by which water is stored in the vegetation.
  • It has three main components: interception loss, throughfall and stem flow.
  • Interception loss from the vegetation is usually greatest at the start of a storm, especially when it follows a dry period.
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19
Q

factors impacting interception

A
  • The interception capacity of the vegetation cover varies considerably with the type of tree, with the dense needles of coniferous forests allowing greater accumulation of water.
  • There are also contrasts between deciduous forests in summer and in winter - interception losses are around 40 per cent in summer for certain Chiltern beech forests, but under 20 per cent in winter.
  • Meteorological conditions also have a major impact.
  • Interception varies by vegetation cover.
  • Coniferous forest intercepts 25-35 per cent of annual rainfall, whereas deciduous forest only 15-25 per cent and arable crops
    10-15 per cent.
  • Wind speeds can decrease interception loss as intercepted rain is dislodged, and they can also increase evaporation rates.
  • The intensity and duration of rainfall is a key factor too.
  • As the amount of rainfall increases, the relative importance of interception losses will decrease: as the tree canopies become saturated, so more excess water will reach the ground.
  • There are also variations for agricultural crops, with interception rates increasing with crop density.
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20
Q

Interception loss:

A
  • This is water that is retained by plant surfaces and later evaporated or absorbed by the vegetation and transpired.
  • When the rain is light, for example drizzle, or of short duration, much of the water will never reach the ground and will be recycled by this process (it’s the reason you can stand under trees when it is raining and not get wet).
21
Q

Throughfall:

A

This is when the rainfall persists or is relatively intense, and the water drops from the leaves, twigs, needles, etc.

22
Q

Stem flow:

A

This is when water trickles along twigs and branches and then down the trunk.

23
Q

Infiltration

A

Infiltration is the process by which water soaks into (or is absorbed by) the soil. The infiltration capacity is the maximum rate at which rain can be absorbed by a soil in a ‘given condition’ and is expressed in mm/hr. The rate of infiltration depends on a number of factors, as shown in Figure 1.6.
Such as

Duration of rainfall

Antecedent soil moisture

Soil porosity

Vegetation cover

Raindrop size

Slope angle

24
Q

Duration of rainfall

A
  • Infiltration capacity decreases with time through a period of rainfall until a more or less constant low value is reached.
25
Q

Antecedent soil moisture

A
  • The rate of infiltration also depends on the amount of water already in the soil (antecedent soil moisture) as surface or overland flow will take place when the soil is saturated.
26
Q

Soil porosity

A
  • The rate of infiltration also depends on the amount of water already in the soil (antecedent soil moisture) as surface or overland flow will take place when the soil is saturated.
27
Q

Vegetation cover

A
  • The type, amount and seasonal changes in vegetation cover are a key factor, with infiltration far more significant in land covered by forests (50 mm/hour) or moorland (42 mm/hour), hence the recent drive to vegetate upland catchments that flow into areas liable to flooding. Permanent pasture has infiltration rates of 13-23 mm/hour depending on grazing density and soil type.
28
Q

raindrop size

A
  • The nature of the soil surface and structure is also important. Compacted surfaces inhibit infiltration (around 10 mm/hour), especially when rain splash impact occurs.
29
Q

Slope angle

A
  • Slope angle can also be significant: very steep slopes tend to encourage overland run-off, with shallower slopes promoting infiltration.
30
Q

Infiltration capacity:

A

The maximum rate at which rain can be absorbed by a soil.

31
Q

Surface run-off:

A

The movement of water that is unconfined by a channel across the surface of the ground. Also known as overland flow.

32
Q

Flows and transfers

A

Overland flow (variously known as surface run-off or direct overland flow

Throughflow

Percolation

Saturated overland flow

Groundwater flow (also known as base flow or interflow)

Channel flow

Evapotranspiration (EVT)

Potential evapotranspiration (PEVT)

33
Q

Overland flow

A
  • (variously known as surface run-off or direct overland flow on account of its rapidity in reaching the channel) is a concept developed by Horton.
  • For this type of flow to occur, precipitation intensity must exceed the infiltration rate.
  • Circumstances include an intense torrential storm, persistently high levels of precipitation over a longer period, or the release of very large quantities of melt water from the rapid melting of snow.
  • Alternatively, bare, ‘baked’ unvegetated surfaces, which commonly occur in arid or semi-arid regions, also lend themselves to overland flow as this type of ground has very limited infiltration capacity.
  • This type of flow is the primary agent of soil erosion as sediment is removed by a range of erosive processes: rain splash, sheet, rill and gully erosion.
  • Direct overland flow occurs once depression storage capacity in puddles has been exceeded.
  • Overland flow is also a feature of many urban areas (see page 18), especially when the capacity of storm drains and sewers has been exceeded.
34
Q

Throughflow

A

refers to the lateral transfer of water down slope through the soil via natural pipes and percolines (lines of concentrated water flow between soil horizons to the river channel). While slower than direct overland flow, this shallow transfer can occur quite rapidly in porous, sandy soils.

35
Q

Percolation

A

can be regarded as a continuation of the infiltration process; it is the deep transfer of water into permeable rocks - those with joints (pervious rocks such as carboniferous limestone) or those with pores (porous rocks such as chalk and sandstone).
The throughflow percolation route is much more likely to be associated with humid climates with vegetated slopes.

36
Q

Saturated overland flow

A

is a much slower transfer process as it results from the upward movement of the water table into the evaporation zone. After a succession of winter storms (for example, in the UK during winter 2015) the water table rises to the surface in depressions and at the base of hill sides.
This leads to saturated overland flow making a major contribution to channel flow.

37
Q

Groundwater flow (also known as base flow or interflow)

A

is the very slow transfer of percolated water through pervious or porous rocks. It is a vital regulatory component in maintaining a steady level of channel flow in varying weather conditions.

38
Q

Channel flow

A

takes place in the river once water from the three transfer processes - overland flow, throughflow or groundwater flow - reaches it. Direct channel precipitation is added to channel storage. depend on the time of year, the type and amount of vegetation cover, the degree of availability of moisture in the atmosphere and the length of growing season.

39
Q

Evapotranspiration (EVT)

A

is the combined effect of evaporation and transpiration. EVT represents the most important aspect of water loss to the atmosphere, accounting for the removal of nearly 100 per cent of the annual precipitation in arid and semi-arid areas, and around 75 per cent in humid areas. Obviously over ice/snow fields, bare rock slopes and soils, desert areas and the majority of water surfaces, the losses are purely evaporative.

40
Q

Potential evapotranspiration (PEVT)

A

is the water loss that would occur if there was an unlimited supply of water in the soil for use by vegetation. Therefore, the difference between PEVT and EVT is much greater in arid areas than in humid areas.

41
Q

Figure 1.8 How the various flows operate within the drainage basin system

A
42
Q

Physical factors that influence the drainage basin cycle

A

Climate

Soils

Geology

Relief

Vegetation

43
Q

Climate

A

Climate has a role in influencing the type and amount of precipitation overall and the amount of evaporation, i.e. the major inputs and outputs. Climate also has an impact on the vegetation type.

44
Q

Soils

A

Soils determine the amount of infiltration and throughflow and, indirectly, the type of vegetation.

45
Q

Geology

A

Geology can impact on subsurface processes such as percolation and groundwater flow (and, therefore, on aquifers). Indirectly, geology alters soil formation.

46
Q

Relief

A

Altitude can impact on precipitation totals.
Slopes can affect the amount of run-off.

47
Q

Vegetation

A

The presence or absence of vegetation has a major impact on the amount of interception, infiltration and occurrence of overland flow, as well as on transpiration rates.

48
Q

Figure 1.9a and Figure 1.9b show contrasting hydrological cycles in two different areas with completely different physical factors. This leads to contrasting inputs, stores, flows and outputs.

A
  • Area A is a semi-arid area, for example on the fringe of the Atacama Desert in northern Chile. It has a low level of water security as there is very little storage potential, and outputs exceed inputs. Other sources are not accessible (fossil water, melt water from the cryosphere).
  • Area B is a temperate rainforest area in southern Chile with a high level of water security; inputs of precipitation exceed outputs and there is also abundant groundwater storage.