Small basin hydrology in the discontinuous permafrost zone

The response of small northern basins to similar rainfall events can vary greatly due to dramatic changes with time in basin parameters. An attempt is made to understand and quantify these changes and suggestions to incorporate systematic variation in model parameters are made in order to produce a...

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Main Author: Vincent, David Guy
Language:English
Published: 2010
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/21602
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-216022018-01-05T17:41:09Z Small basin hydrology in the discontinuous permafrost zone Vincent, David Guy The response of small northern basins to similar rainfall events can vary greatly due to dramatic changes with time in basin parameters. An attempt is made to understand and quantify these changes and suggestions to incorporate systematic variation in model parameters are made in order to produce a more reliable 'northern' model. Of particular interest are the permafrost regime, the vegetative cover, the evaporation process and the attenuation of the hydrographs making antecedent conditions important in predicting peak flows. Further ideas are presented to produce a deterministic model which incorporates both random and systematic changes in parameters in order to yield more reliable estimates of flow statistics for use in design. The background study was sponsored by Canadian Arctic Gas Study Limited during their bid to construct a pipeline in the Mackenzie Valley. Applied Science, Faculty of Civil Engineering, Department of Unknown 2010-03-06T00:10:40Z 2010-03-06T00:10:40Z 1979 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/21602 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use.
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language English
sources NDLTD
description The response of small northern basins to similar rainfall events can vary greatly due to dramatic changes with time in basin parameters. An attempt is made to understand and quantify these changes and suggestions to incorporate systematic variation in model parameters are made in order to produce a more reliable 'northern' model. Of particular interest are the permafrost regime, the vegetative cover, the evaporation process and the attenuation of the hydrographs making antecedent conditions important in predicting peak flows. Further ideas are presented to produce a deterministic model which incorporates both random and systematic changes in parameters in order to yield more reliable estimates of flow statistics for use in design. The background study was sponsored by Canadian Arctic Gas Study Limited during their bid to construct a pipeline in the Mackenzie Valley. === Applied Science, Faculty of === Civil Engineering, Department of === Unknown
author Vincent, David Guy
spellingShingle Vincent, David Guy
Small basin hydrology in the discontinuous permafrost zone
author_facet Vincent, David Guy
author_sort Vincent, David Guy
title Small basin hydrology in the discontinuous permafrost zone
title_short Small basin hydrology in the discontinuous permafrost zone
title_full Small basin hydrology in the discontinuous permafrost zone
title_fullStr Small basin hydrology in the discontinuous permafrost zone
title_full_unstemmed Small basin hydrology in the discontinuous permafrost zone
title_sort small basin hydrology in the discontinuous permafrost zone
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/21602
work_keys_str_mv AT vincentdavidguy smallbasinhydrologyinthediscontinuouspermafrostzone
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