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A GIS-based hillslope erosion and sediment delivery model and its application in the Cerro Grande burn area

✍ Scribed by Cathy J. Wilson; J. William Carey; Peter C. Beeson; Marvin O. Gard; Leonard J. Lane


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2001
Tongue
English
Weight
482 KB
Volume
15
Category
Article
ISSN
0885-6087

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

An Erratum has been published for this article in Hydrological Processes 16(5) 2002, 1130–1130.

A profile‐based, analytical hillslope erosion model (HEM) is integrated into a geographical information system (GIS) framework to provide a tool to assess the impact of the Cerro Grande fire on erosion and sediment delivery to the many streams draining the burn area. The model, HEM–GIS, calculates rill and interrill erosion, transport and deposition along digital flow‐pathways generated with GIS software. This new erosion and sediment yield technology accounts for complex terrain attributes and their impact on the connectivity of sediment transport pathways from source areas to streams. GIS digital spatial data, including elevation, vegetation cover, burn severity and soil type, are used as input to the model. Output includes spatially distributed predictions of total event‐based sediment yield (tonnes or kilograms per square metre). Here the model is applied across an 800 km^2^ region of the Pajarito Plateau watershed to assess the sedimentation risks associated with a 100 year design rain event. Although unvalidated for the design storm, the model predicts that the fire may cause runoff to increase by three to six times, and sediment yield to increase by more than an order of magnitude. Published in 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.


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