Outline of hydrology

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Short description: Overview of and topical guide to hydrology

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to hydrology:

Hydrology – study of the movement, distribution, and quality of water on Earth and other planets, including the hydrologic cycle, water resources and environmental watershed sustainability.


What type of thing is hydrology?

Hydrology can be described as all of the following:

Essence of hydrology

Branches of hydrology

  • Hydrometry – the measurement of the different components of the hydrologic cycle
  • Chemical hydrology – the study of the chemical characteristics of water
  • Ecohydrology – the study of interactions between organisms and the hydrologic cycle
  • Hydrogeology – the study of the presence and movement of water in aquifers
  • Hydroinformatics – the adaptation of information technology to hydrology and water resources applications
  • Hydrometeorology – the study of the transfer of water and energy between land and water body surfaces and the lower atmosphere
  • Isotope hydrology – the study of the isotopic signatures of water
  • Surface hydrology – the study of hydrologic processes that operate at or near the Earth's surface
  • Catchment hydrology – study of the governing processes in a given hydrologically-defined catchment
  • Drainage basin management – covers water-storage, in the form of reservoirs, and flood-protection.
  • Water quality – includes the chemistry of water in rivers and lakes, both of pollutants and natural solutes.

History of hydrology

History of hydrology

Things studied by hydrology

Abstract concepts in hydrology

Phenomena studied by hydrology

Water movement pathways

Water cycle (aka "hydrological cycle")

Physical things studied by hydrology

Environmental issues

Measurement tools

Groundwater[1]

  • Aquifer characterization
  • Flow direction
  • Piezometer - groundwater pressure and, by inference, groundwater depth (see: aquifer test)
  • Conductivity, storativity, transmisivity
  • Geophysical methods

Surface water[1]

  • Water level
  • Channel shape
  • Dumpy level –
  • Discharge

Meteorological

  • Precipitation[1]
  • Rain gauge – rainfall depth (unit) and intensity (unit time−1)
  • Disdrometer – raindrop size, total precipitation depth and intensity
  • Doppler weather radar – raindrop size, total precipitation depth and intensity, rain cloud reflectivity converted to precipitation intensity through calibration to rain gauges
  • Wind profiler – precipitation vertical and horizontal motion, vertical cross-section of reflectivity and typing
  • Frozen precipitation (on ground)
  • Pressure sensors – pressure, depth, and liquid water equivalent
  • Acoustic sensors – pressure, depth, and liquid water equivalent
  • Mean windspeed and direction
  • Mean air temperature
  • Humidity
  • Air pressure
  • Heat flux
  • Cloudiness/Sunshine
  • Evapotranspiration [2]
  • Water budget method
  • Basin water balance –
  • Evaporation pan –
  • Lysimetry –
  • Soil moisture depletion –
  • Water vapor transfer method
  • Component analysis
  • Large-scale

Soil/porous media[1]

  • Bulk density & porosity
  • Oven dried sample –
  • Matric potential
  • Suction plate – determines relationship between the water volume and matric potential
  • Resistance thermometer – relates to matric potential from previous calibration
  • Hydraulic conductivity
  • Disc permeameter – measures soil hydraulic conductivity
  • Rainfall simulator – measures output through the application of constant input ("rain") in a sealed area
  • Slug test – addition or removal of water and monitors the time until return to predisturbance level
  • Piezometer
  • Soil moisture content (water volume percentage)

Water quality[1]

  • Conductivity
  • pH
  • Dissolved oxygen (DO)
  • Turbidity
  • Water clarity
  • Bed load
  • Erosion/deposition

Modeling

Equations

Basin

Catchment

Evaporation

  • Penman
  • Penman-Monteith –

Infiltration/Soil Movement

  • Darcy's Law –

Streamflow/Open channel

Erosion

Groundwater

Power/Uncertainty

Models

Hydrological transport model

Applications of hydrology

Some examples of applications of hydrology:

Hydrology organizations

Intergovernmental organizations

  • International Hydrological Programme (IHP)[3]

International research bodies

National research bodies

  • Centre for Ecology and Hydrology – UK[6]
  • Centre for Water Science, Cranfield University, UK[7]
  • eawag – aquatic research, ETH Zürich, Switzerland[8]
  • Institute of Hydrology, Albert-Ludwigs-University of Freiburg, Germany[9]
  • United States Geological Survey – Water Resources of the United States[10]
  • NOAA's National Weather Service – Office of Hydrologic Development, USA[11]
  • US Army Corps of Engineers Hydrologic Engineering Center, USA[12]
  • Hydrologic Research Center, USA[13]
  • NOAA Economics and Social Sciences, USA[14]
  • University of Oklahoma Center for Natural Hazards and Disasters Research, USA[15]
  • National Hydrology Research Centre, Canada[16]
  • National Institute of Hydrology, India[17]

National and international societies

Basin- and catchment-wide overviews

  • Connected Waters Initiative, University of New South Wales[32] – Investigating and raising awareness of groundwater and water resource issues in Australia
  • Murray Darling Basin Initiative, Department of Environment and Heritage, Australia[33]

Hydrology publications

Hydrology-related journals

  • Hydrological Processes, ISSN 1099-1085 (electronic) 0885-6087 (paper), John Wiley & Sons
  • Hydrology Research, ISSN 0029-1277, IWA Publishing (formerly Nordic Hydrology)
  • Journal of Hydroinformatics, ISSN 1464-7141, IWA Publishing
  • Journal of Hydrologic Engineering, ISSN 0733-9496, ASCE Publication
  • Journal of Hydrology
  • Water Research
  • Water Resources Research
  • Hydrological Sciences Journal Journal of the International Association of Hydrological Sciences (IAHS) ISSN 0262-6667 (Print), ISSN 2150-3435 (Online)

Persons influential in the field of hydrology

  • Hein de Baar
  • Günter Blöschl
  • Chen Xing (hydrologist)
  • Ven Te Chow
  • Gedeon Dagan
  • James Dooge
  • Endre Dudich
  • G. H. Dury
  • Saeid Eslamian
  • Philipp Forchheimer
  • François-Alphonse Forel
  • Pieter Harting
  • Majid Hassanizadeh
  • Alf Howard
  • Jan Vladimír Hráský
  • Hydra (skater)
  • Shahbaz Khan (hydrologist)
  • Vit Klemes
  • Michal Kravčík
  • Torben Larsen
  • John R. Philip
  • Giovanni Roncagli
  • Arturo Sanchez-Azofeifa
  • Alireza Shokoohi
  • Bojidar Spiriev
  • Valeryan Uryvaev
  • Jasper A. Vrugt
  • John Williams (water scientist)
  • Czesław Zakaszewski

Allied sciences

Hydrology lists

  • Drainage basins by area – largest hydrologically defined watersheds in the world
  • Floods – chronological and geographic list of major floods worldwide
  • Waterways – worldwide listing of waterbodies classified as rivers, canals, estuaries, and firths

See also

Other water-related fields
  • Oceanography – more general study of water in the oceans and estuaries.
  • Meteorology – more general study of the atmosphere and of weather, including precipitation as snow and rainfall.
  • Limnology – study of inland waters (running and standing waters, both fresh and saline, natural or man-made), including their biological, chemical, physical, geological, and other attributes.[34] This includes the study of lakes and ponds, rivers, springs, streams and wetlands.
  • Water resources – sources of water that are useful or potentially useful. Hydrology studies the availability of those resources, but usually not their uses.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Western, Andrew W. (2005). "Principles of Hydrological Measurements". in Anderson, Malcolm G.. Encyclopedia of Hydrological Sciences. 1. West Sussex, England: John Wiley & Sons Inc.. pp. 75–94. 
  2. Shuttleworth, W. James (January–February 2008). "Evapotranspiration Measurement Methods". Southwest Hydrology (Tucson, AZ) 7 (1): 22–23. http://www.swhydro.arizona.edu/archive/V7_N1/feature3.pdf. Retrieved 2009-07-22. 
  3. "International Hydrological Programme (IHP)". IHP. 6 May 2013. http://www.unesco.org/new/en/natural-sciences/environment/water/. 
  4. "International Water Management Institute (IWMI)". IWMI. http://www.iwmi.cgiar.org. 
  5. "UNESCO-IHE Institute for Water Education". UNIESCO-IHE. http://www.unesco-ihe.org. 
  6. "CEH Website". Centre for Ecology & Hydrology. http://www.ceh.ac.uk/. 
  7. "Cranfield Water Science Institute". Cranfield University. http://www.cranfield.ac.uk/sas/water. 
  8. "Eawag aquatic research". Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology. 25 January 2012. http://www.eawag.ch. 
  9. "Professur für Hydrologie". University of Freiburg. 23 February 2010. http://www.hydro.uni-freiburg.de/strt-en?set_language=en. 
  10. "Water Resources of the United States". USGS. 4 October 2011. http://water.usgs.gov. 
  11. "Office of Hydrologic Development". National Weather Service. NOAA. 28 October 2011. http://www.weather.gov/ohd/. 
  12. "Hydrologic Engineering Center". US Army Corps of Engineers. http://www.hec.usace.army.mil. 
  13. "Hydrologic Research Center". Hydrologic Research Center. http://www.hrc-lab.org. 
  14. "NOAA Economics and Social Sciences". NOAA Office of Program Planning and Integration. http://www.economics.noaa.gov/?goal=weather&file=users/business/watermgt/. 
  15. "Center for Natural Hazard and Disasters Research". University of Oklahoma. 17 June 2008. http://vpr-norman.ou.edu/centers-institutes/list/center-natural-hazards-and-disasters-research. 
  16. "National Hydrology Research Centre (Saskatoon, SK)". Environmental Science Centres. Environment Canada. http://www.ec.gc.ca/scitech/default.asp?lang=En&n=44EEFEB3-1#nhrc. 
  17. "National Institute of Hydrology (Roorkee), India". NIH Roorkee. http://www.nih.ernet.in. 
  18. "Hydrogeology Division". The Geological Society of America. 10 September 2011. http://gsahydro.fiu.edu/index.htm. 
  19. "Welcome to AGU's Hydrology (H) Section". American Geophysical Union. http://hydrology.agu.org/. 
  20. "National Ground Water Association". http://www.ngwa.org. 
  21. "American Water Resources Association". 2 January 2012. http://www.awra.org. 
  22. "CUAHSI". http://www.cuahsi.org/. 
  23. "International Association of Hydrological Sciences (IAHS)". Associations. International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics. 1 December 2008. http://www.iugg.org/associations/iahs.php. 
  24. "International Association of Hydrological Sciences". http://iahs.info/. 
  25. "International Commission on Statistical Hydrology". STAHY. http://www.stahy.org. 
  26. Deutsche Hydrologische Gesellschaft, accessed 2 September 2013
  27. Nordic Association for Hydrology, accessed 2 September 2013
  28. "The British Hydrological Society". http://www.hydrology.org.uk/. 
  29. "Error: no |title= specified when using {{Cite web}}" (in ru). Russian Geographical Society. http://rgo.msk.ru/commissions/hydrology/. 
  30. "Hydroweb". The International Association for Environmental Hydrology. http://hydroweb.com. 
  31. "International Association of Hydrogeologists". http://iah.org/. 
  32. "Connected Waters Initiative (CWI)". University of New South Wales. http://www.connectedwaters.unsw.edu.au. 
  33. "Integrated Water Resource Management in Australia: Case studies – Murray–Darling Basin initiative". Australian Government. http://www.environment.gov.au/node/24407. 
  34. Wetzel, R.G. (2001) Limnology: Lake and River Ecosystems, 3rd ed. Academic Press. ISBN:0-12-744760-1

External links