A vector-based method for drainage network analysis based on LiDAR data

Drainage network analysis is fundamental to understanding the characteristics of surface hydrology. Based on elevation data, drainage network analysis is often used to extract key hydrological features like drainage networks and streamlines. Limited by raster-based data models, conventional drainage...

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Veröffentlicht in:Computers & geosciences 2021-11, Vol.156, p.104892, Article 104892
Hauptverfasser: Lyu, Fangzheng, Xu, Zewei, Ma, Xinlin, Wang, Shaohua, Li, Zhiyu, Wang, Shaowen
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Drainage network analysis is fundamental to understanding the characteristics of surface hydrology. Based on elevation data, drainage network analysis is often used to extract key hydrological features like drainage networks and streamlines. Limited by raster-based data models, conventional drainage network algorithms typically allow water to flow in 4 or 8 directions (surrounding grids) from a raster grid. To resolve this limitation, this paper describes a new vector-based method for drainage network analysis that allows water to flow in any direction around each location. The method is enabled by rapid advances in Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR) remote sensing and high-performance computing. The drainage network analysis is conducted using a high-density point cloud instead of Digital Elevation Models (DEMs) at coarse resolutions. Our computational experiments show that the vector-based method can better capture water flows without limiting the number of directions due to imprecise DEMs. Our case study applies the method to Rowan County watershed, North Carolina in the US. After comparing the drainage networks and streamlines detected with corresponding reference data from US Geological Survey generated from the Geonet software, we find that the new method performs well in capturing the characteristics of water flows on landscape surfaces in order to form an accurate drainage network. •Vector-based drainage system analysis that enables water to flow in any direction.•Drainage system analysis and streamline detection based on fine-resolution LiDAR data.•High-performance computing for resolving computational intensity of fine-scale drainage network analysis.
ISSN:0098-3004
1873-7803
DOI:10.1016/j.cageo.2021.104892