Publication | Closed Access
THE CONCEPT OF HYDROLOGIC LANDSCAPES<sup>1</sup>
468
Citations
9
References
2001
Year
Landscape ProcessesLandscape HydrologyHydrological ScienceEngineeringWater ResourcesGeomorphologyWatershed ManagementCatchment ScaleGeographyWatershed HydrologySurface-water HydrologyGround‐water FlowHydrologic LandscapesCrow Wing RiverHydrologySocial Sciences
Hydrologic landscapes are defined by land‑surface form, geology, and climate, and each fundamental unit contains a complete hydrologic system of surface runoff, groundwater flow, and atmospheric interactions. The framework aims to underpin study design, data network development, synthesis across scales, and comparative process research. The authors illustrate the concept using the Crow Wing River watershed and several Midwestern lake‑research watersheds to evaluate stream discharge and groundwater‑driven lake chemistry.
ABSTRACT: Hydrologic landscapes are multiples or variations of fundamental hydrologic landscape units. A fundamental hydrologic landscape unit is defined on the basis of land‐surface form, geology, and climate. The basic land‐surface form of a fundamental hydrologic landscape unit is an upland separated from a lowland by an intervening steeper slope. Fundamental hydrologic landscape units have a complete hydrologic system consisting of surface runoff, ground‐water flow, and interaction with atmospheric water. By describing actual landscapes in terms of land‐surface slope, hydraulic properties of soils and geologic framework, and the difference between precipitation and evapotranspiration, the hydrologic system of actual landscapes can be conceptualized in a uniform way. This conceptual framework can then be the foundation for design of studies and data networks, syntheses of information on local to national scales, and comparison of process research across small study units in a variety of settings. The Crow Wing River watershed in central Minnesota is used as an example of evaluating stream discharge in the context of hydrologic landscapes. Lake‐research watersheds in Wisconsin, Minnesota, North Dakota, and Nebraska are used as an example of using the hydrologic‐land‐scapes concept to evaluate the effect of ground water on the degree of mineralization and major‐ion chemistry of lakes that lie within ground‐water flow systems.
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