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Multi-scale permeability estimation for a tropical catchment

โœ Scribed by Nick A. Chappell; Stewart W. Franks; Jonny Larenus


Book ID
101282517
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1998
Tongue
English
Weight
311 KB
Volume
12
Category
Article
ISSN
0885-6087

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โœฆ Synopsis


Physically based and spatially distributed modelling of catchment hydrology involves the estimation of block or whole-hillslope permeabilities. Invariably these estimates are derived by calibration against rainfallยฑruno response. Rarely are these estimates rigorously compared with parameter measurements made at the small scale. This study uses a parametrically simple model, TOPMODEL, and an uncertainty framework to derive permeability at the catchment scale. The utility of expert knowledge of the internal catchment dynamics (i.e. extent of saturated area) in constraining parameter uncertainty is demonstrated. Model-derived estimates are then compared with core-based measurements of permeability appropriately up-scaled. The observed dierences between the permeability estimates derived by the two methods might be attributed to the role of intermediate scale features (natural soil pipes). An alternative method of determining block permeabilities at the intermediate or hillslope scale is described. This method uses pulse-wave tests and explicitly incorporates the resultant eects of phenomena such as soil piping and kinematic wave migration. The study aims to highlight issues associated with parameterizing or validating distributed models, rather than to provide a deยฎnitive solution. The fact that the permeability distribution within the Borneo study catchment is comparatively simple, assists the comparisons. The ยฎeld data were collected in terrain covered by equatorial rainforest. Combined ยฎeld measurement and modelling programmes are rare within such environments.


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