Upscaling River Network Extractions from Global Digital Elevation
Models
By Mary S. Lear, M.S.E., James S. Famiglietti, and David R. Maidment
ABSTRACT
The representation of stream networks is an integral component of river
transport schemes used in large-scale hydrological and climate models.
However, the coarse resolution of the cells describing the land component
of climate models (e.g. 2.8Í) is insufficient to adequately represent
river flow directions across continents. Hence, a methodology is required
for upscaling river network extraction from high resolution digital
elevation models (DEMs) to the lower resolution of the climate models
to which they will be applied. In this study, an innovative approach
for upscaling flow directions is introduced. The method utilizes the
maximum flow accumulation, computed from the high resolution DEM, to
determine the most realistic representation of the river network at
the coarse resolution. The approach is original because it incorporates
a projected mesh as the overlay for the high resolution grid and uses
a unique division of the low resolution grid into four sub-sections.
Upscaled networks for rivers of Africa and South America are compared
with the river networks from alternative upscaling methods and from
the fine resolution river network to determine which approach best represents
the rivers. Example river networks are provided for the Niger, the Congo
and the Amazon River basins.
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2000 Center for Research in Water Resources.
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