Carving and adaptive drainage enforcement of grid digital elevation models
- 24 December 2003
- journal article
- Published by American Geophysical Union (AGU) in Water Resources Research
- Vol. 39 (12)
- https://doi.org/10.1029/2002wr001879
Abstract
An effective and widely used method for removing spurious pits in digital elevation models consists of filling them until they overflow. However, this method sometimes creates large flat regions which in turn pose a problem for the determination of accurate flow directions. In this study, we propose to suppress each pit by creating a descending path from it to the nearest point having a lower elevation value. This is achieved by carving, i.e., lowering, the terrain elevations along the detected path. Carving paths are identified through a flooding simulation starting from the river outlets. The proposed approach allows for adaptive drainage enforcement whereby river networks coming from other data sources are imposed to the digital elevation model only in places where the automatic river network extraction deviates substantially from the known networks. An improvement to methods for routing flow over flat regions is also introduced. Detailed results are presented over test areas of the Danube basin.Keywords
This publication has 47 references indexed in Scilit:
- Determination of the drainage structure of a watershed using a digital elevation model and a digital river and lake networkJournal of Hydrology, 2001
- Hillslope processes, drainage density, and landscape morphologyWater Resources Research, 1998
- A new method for the determination of flow directions and upslope areas in grid digital elevation modelsWater Resources Research, 1997
- A detachment‐limited model of drainage basin evolutionWater Resources Research, 1994
- An Efficient Algorithm for Drainage Network Extraction on DEMsJournal of Visual Communication and Image Representation, 1994
- Automated recognition of valley lines and drainage networks from grid digital elevation models: a review and a new methodJournal of Hydrology, 1992
- A combined algorithm for automated drainage network extractionWater Resources Research, 1992
- Spatial distributions from contour lines: An efficient methodology based on distance transformationsJournal of Visual Communication and Image Representation, 1991
- A new procedure for gridding elevation and stream line data with automatic removal of spurious pitsJournal of Hydrology, 1989
- Geodesic methods in quantitative image analysisPattern Recognition, 1984