STUDY OF SPATIAL SCALING IN BRAIDED RIVER PATTERNS USING SYNTHETIC-APERTURE RADAR IMAGERY

Citation
Dk. Nykanen et al., STUDY OF SPATIAL SCALING IN BRAIDED RIVER PATTERNS USING SYNTHETIC-APERTURE RADAR IMAGERY, Water resources research, 34(7), 1998, pp. 1795-1807
Citations number
30
Categorie Soggetti
Limnology,"Environmental Sciences","Water Resources
Journal title
ISSN journal
00431397
Volume
34
Issue
7
Year of publication
1998
Pages
1795 - 1807
Database
ISI
SICI code
0043-1397(1998)34:7<1795:SOSSIB>2.0.ZU;2-R
Abstract
Synthetic aperture radar (SAR) imagery offers an appealing way of remo tely monitoring the complex and rapidly changing forms of braided rive rs. These rivers are often found in scarcely inhabited regions and are so dynamic that in situ measurements are almost impossible. In this p aper, SAR imagery was used to extract braided river patterns such that their spatial scaling characteristics could be studied. From analysis of several reaches of a braided river in Alaska (the Tanana River), s elf-affine spatial scaling of the river patterns was found to be prese nt under different flow rates and in different seasons when the river was undisturbed (free of external topographic controls). In regions wh ere predominant geologic controls (i.e., mountains) or predominant flo w paths (several tens of times the size of the other channels) were pr esent, no spatial scaling was found. When scaling was found, the value s of the anisotropic scaling exponents v(x) and v(y) had very similar values to those found by Sapozhnikov and Foufoula-Georgiou [1996] from traced and digitized aerial photographs of several braided rivers.