Welcome to the new version of CaltechAUTHORS. Login is currently restricted to library staff. If you notice any issues, please email coda@library.caltech.edu
Published April 28, 2011 | Published
Journal Article Open

Cold-regions river flow observed from space

Abstract

Knowledge of water-surface velocities in rivers is useful for understanding a wide range of lotic processes and systems, such as water and ice fluxes and forces, mixing, solute and sediment transport, bed and bank stability, aquatic and riparian ecology, and extreme hydrologic events. In cold regions, river-ice break up and the associated downstream transport of ice debris is often the most important hydrological event of the year, producing flood levels that commonly exceed those for the open-water period and dramatic consequences for river infrastructure and ecology. Quantification of river surface velocity and currents has relied mostly on very scarce in situ measurements or particle tracking in laboratory models, with few attempts to cover entire river reaches. Accurate and complete surface-velocity fields on rivers have rarely been produced. Here, we use river-ice debris as an index of surface water velocity, and track it over a time period of about one minute, which is the typical time lapse between the two or more images that form a stereo data set in spaceborne, alongtrack optical-stereo mapping. In this way, we measure and visualize for the first time, the almost complete surface velocity field of a river. Examples are used from approximately 80 km and 40 km long reaches of the St. Lawrence and Mackenzie rivers, respectively. The methodology and results will be valuable to a number of disciplines requiring detailed information about river flow, such as hydraulics, hydrology, river ecology and natural-hazard management.

Additional Information

© 2011 American Geophysical Union. Received 4 February 2011; revised 7 March 2011; accepted 9 March 2011; published 20 April 2011. This study was supported by The Research Council of Norway (NFR) through the CORRIA project (185906/V30) and the International Centre for Geohazards (SFF-ICG 146035/420), and the National Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, Environment Canada, and the International Polar Year program. It is a contribution to the 'Monitoring Earth surface changes from space' study by the Keck Institute for Space Studies at Caltech/JPL. ASTER data are courtesy of NASA/GSFC/METI/ERSDAC/JAROS, and the US/Japan ASTER science team, and were obtained within the Global Land Ice Measurements from Space project. ALOS PRISM and AVNIR data are courtesy of AOALO.3579, copyright ESA; IKONOS data are copyright GeoEye Inc. Topographic data are courtesy of the Canadian GeoBase initiative, tidal data of Fisheries and Oceans Canada (Canadian Hydrographic Service), and hydrological data of Environment Canada (Water Survey). The authors thank Tamlin Pavelsky and an anonymous reviewer for their assistance in evaluating this paper. The Editor thanks Tamlin Pavelsky and an anonymous reviewer for their assistance in evaluating this paper.

Attached Files

Published - cold.pdf

Files

cold.pdf
Files (4.7 MB)
Name Size Download all
md5:ba0f8c58a9a7dedf52e5062c9dd97b74
4.7 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 17, 2023