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A Hydroinformatic Approach to Assess Interpolation...
Journal article

A Hydroinformatic Approach to Assess Interpolation Techniques in High Spatial and Temporal Resolution

Abstract

One of the problems which often arises in hydrologic and hydraulic design is the estimation of data at a given site, where data are missing or the site is ungauged. Estimates can be made by spatial interpolation of data available at other sites. Geographic information systems offer a number of embedded ready-to-use spatial interpolation techniques. It is the intent of this paper to document the development of a GIS-based tool to compare the applicability of various interpolation techniques for estimating rainfall for a selected area in Ontario, Canada. The interpolation techniques in the ArcView GIS® are: IDW, Spline (Tension and Regularized), 2nd Order Polynomial, and Kriging (Ordinary and Universal). One-minute rainfall data for sixteen events were extracted from ten rainy days during the summer of 1989. The test case is an 8 km by 8 km area located in the Hamilton-Wentworth region. It is covered by a nine-gauge network. The comparison shows that the IDW and Kriging_Gaussian are the best and worst techniques, respectively. Results also point out that some gauges are more important than others. The results, however, can also be considered a useful warning of the instability of interpolation techniques with limited/sparse data, particularly in the context of commercial software.

Authors

Naoum S; Tsanis IK

Journal

Canadian Water Resources Journal / Revue canadienne des ressources hydriques, Vol. 29, No. 1, pp. 23–46

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Publication Date

January 1, 2004

DOI

10.4296/cwrj23

ISSN

0701-1784

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