1 / 23

Digital Elevation Model & Terrain Analysis

Digital Elevation Model & Terrain Analysis. Terrain Analysis. Terrain - an integral part of determining the natural availability and location of surface water, soil moisture and drainage determining transportation networks

dyllis
Télécharger la présentation

Digital Elevation Model & Terrain Analysis

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Digital Elevation Model & Terrain Analysis

  2. Terrain Analysis • Terrain - an integral part of • determining the natural availability and location of surface water, soil moisture and drainage • determining transportation networks • site suitability for a variety of applications (cost and methods of house and road construction)

  3. Elevation and slope: • flood zones and watershed boundaries delineation • hydrologic networks

  4. Terrain Analysis • Slope • Aspect • Catchment/watershed area • Viewshed • Flow path and direction

  5. Slope and Aspect • Slope • change is elevation (a rise) with a change in horizontal position (a run) • Slope is often reported in degrees (0° is flat, 90° is vertical)

  6. Slope (continued) Slope direction at a point in the landscape is measured in the steepest direction of the elevation change

  7. Slope (continued) • slope direction often does not point parallel to raster rows and columns • which cells to use? • How to obtain the values for rise/run? • there are different methods • Examples: • Four nearest cells • 3rd Order Finite Difference Fig: Direction of steepest slope

  8. Slope (continued) Where: s = slope Z = elevation x, y coordinate ases dz/dx = rise (change in z) over run in x-direction dz/dx = rise (change in z) over run in y-direction • Elevation expressed as Z • Calculated with a symmetrical moving window (3x3, 5x5, other odd numbered windows) • Slope at each center cell is calculated from:

  9. Slope (continued) • Many different formulas proposed for calculating dz/dx and dz/dy • Most simplest – based on cells adjacent to the center cell • Four nearest = uses 4 nearest cells

  10. Aspect • Azimuth angle, measured clockwise in degrees from north (0 – 360 degrees) • Aspect at a point is the steepest downhill direction • Flat areas have no aspect (no downhill direction) • Used to define: • water flow direction • Amount of sunlight at a location • Portion of landscape visible from viewing point

  11. Aspect calculation • .

  12. Profile curvature and plan curvature • Derived form DEM • Helpful in measuring and predicting • Soil water content • Overland flow • Rainfall-runoff response in small catchment • Distribution of vegetation

  13. Profile curvature • Index of surface shape in the steepest downhill direction • Pane curvature • Profile shape in the direction of the contour – at right angle to the steepest direction

  14. Hydrologic Functions • Watershed • An area that contributes flow to a point on the landscape • Water falling anywhere in the upstream area of a watershed will pass through that point • Drainage network • A set of cells through which surface water flows • Based on the flow direction surface

  15. Drainage network and watersheds

  16. Watershed delineation • Condition DEM • Fill DEM • Flow Direction • Flow Accumulation • Stream Definition • Outlet Identification • Watershed Delineation

  17. Flow direction

  18. Hydrologic Functions

  19. Viewshed • Is the collection of areas visible from a specific point • Non flat areas block the view • Elevation will hide points if the elevations are higher than the line of sight between viewing point and target point

  20. Shaded relief surfaces • Depicts brightness of terrain reflections given a terrain surface and sun location

More Related