It is the task of the engineer, as of any other professional person, to do everything that is reasonably possible to analyse the difficulties with which his or her client is confronted, and on this basis to design solutions and implement these in practice. The distributed hydrological model is, correspondingly, the means for doing everything that is reasonably possible - of mobilising as much data and testing it with as much knowledge as is economically feasible - for the purpose of analysing problems and of designing and implementing remedial measures in the case of difficulties arising within the hydrological cycle. Thus the aim of distributed hydrologic modelling is to make the fullest use of cartographic data, of geological data, of satellite data, of stream discharge measurements, of borehole data, of observations of crops and other vegetation, of historical records of floods and droughts, and indeed of everything else that has ever been recorded or remembered, and then to apply to this everything that is known about meteorology, plant physiology, soil physics, hydrogeology, sediment transport and everything else that is relevant within this context. Of course, no matter how much data we have and no matter how much we know, it will never be enough to treat some problems and some situations, but still we can aim in this way to do the best that we possibly can.
ISBN: | 9789401065993 |
Publication date: | 28th September 2011 |
Author: | Michael B Abbott, Jens Christian Refsgaard |
Publisher: | Springer an imprint of Springer Netherlands |
Format: | Paperback |
Pagination: | 336 pages |
Series: | Water Science and Technology Library |
Genres: |
Geology, geomorphology and the lithosphere Mathematical modelling Soil science and management Geographical information systems, geodata and remote sensing Maths for engineers |