Search Images Maps Play YouTube News Gmail Drive More »
My library | Help | Advanced Book Search | Web History | Sign in

Books

Watershed Models

 (Google eBook)
Front Cover
Vijay P. Singh, Donald K. Frevert
1 Review
CRC Press, Dec 12, 2010 - Science - 680 pages
Watershed modeling is at the heart of modern hydrology, supplying rich information that is vital to addressing resource planning, environmental, and social problems. Even in light of this important role, many books relegate the subject to a single chapter while books devoted to modeling focus only on a specific area of application. Recognizing the need for a broad, comprehensive overview of the various types of watershed models, renowned experts Singh and Frevert carefully selected several highly popular and useful models to produce this groundbreaking reference.

Watershed Models comprises seven sections that encompass 24 models chosen for a variety of characteristics, such as physical bases, mathematical sophistication, comprehensiveness, broad-based applicability, and use of modern tools. After a concise introduction, the book examines the history and evolution of watershed modeling derived from the Stanford Watershed Model along with regional calibration of models. The following six sections explore large watershed, streamflow, water quality, urban watershed, agricultural watershed, and planning and management models. Each chapter contains a wealth of information on model parameters, the strengths of each model for particular purposes, and examples of applications.

Offering an up-to-date review of models used worldwide, Watershed Models supplies broad, integrated knowledge necessary for solving the complex and ongoing problems involved in resource and environmental water management.
  

What people are saying - Write a review

User Review - Flag as inappropriate

book

Related books

Selected pages

Contents

1 Introduction
3
2 History and Evolution of Watershed Modeling Derived from the Stanford Watershed Model SWM
21
3 Regional Calibration of Watershed Models
47
Large Watershed Models
73
4 LargeScale Hybrid Watershed Modeling
75
5 Simulation of Water and Energy Budgets Using a Macroscale Hydrological Model for the Upper Mississippi River Basin
97
Streamflow Models
129
A Model for Simulating Diverse StreamflowProducing Processes
131
14 EPA Storm Water Management Model SWMM5
339
Integrated Design and Evaluation Assessment of Loadings Model
361
16 SEDIMOT III Model
381
17 The SPAW Model for Agricultural Field and Pond Hydrologic Simulation
401
18 The APEX Model
437
The Guelph Model for Evaluating the Effects of Agricultural Management Systems on Erosion and Sedimentation
483
Planning and Management Models
501
Case Studies
503

7 USGS Modular Modeling System MMS PrecipitationRunoff Modeling System PRMS
159
8 The Xinanjiang Model on Digital Basin Platform
179
Streamflow and Water Quality Models
209
WASH123D
211
10 Flexible Integrated Watershed Modeling with MIKE SHE
245
11 Better Assessment Science Integrating Point and Nonpoint Sources BASINS
273
A Physically Based SpatiallyDistributed Runoff and Erosion Model for Extreme Rainfall Events
291
Modeling Irrigated Catchments Using the Streamflow Integral Approach
315
Urban Watershed Models
337
21 RiverWare
527
22 A Parsimonious Watershed Model
549
River Basin Management Decision Support System
569
24 Water Rights Analysis Package WRAP Modeling System
593
25 Hydrological River Basin Environment Assessment Model HydroBEAM
613
26 State of Colorados Stream Simulation Model StateMod
627
Index
637
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Popular passages

Page 4 - Demands for the 1990s, which contain several important watershed hydrology models. Singh (1995) edited a book that summarized 26 popular models from around the globe. The Subcommittee on Hydrology of the Interagency Advisory Committee on Water Data (1998) published proceedings of the First Federal Interagency Hydrologic Modeling Conference which contains many popular watershed hydrology models developed by federal agencies in the United States. Wurbs (1998) listed a number of generalized water resources...

References to this book

From Google Scholar

Sediment AND Nutrient Modeling FOR TMDL Development AND Implementation
DK Borah, G Yagow, A Saleh, PL Barnes, W Rosenthal, EC Krug, LM Hauck
Characterization of watershed model behavior across a ...
K van Werkhoven, T Wagener, P Reed, Y Tang - 2008 - Water Resour. Res
Storm Event and Continuous Hydrologic Modeling for Comprehensive ...
Deva K Borah, Jeffrey G Arnold, Maitreyee Bera, Edward C Krug, Xin-Zhong Liang - 2007 - Journal of Hydrologic Engineering
A compartment approach for hydrosystem analysis based on object ...
Olaf Kolditz, Jens-Olaf Delfs, Martin Beinhorn, Claudius Burger
All Scholar search results »

Bibliographic information