Florinsky, Igor
The examples shown in Section 3.2 describe cases of remote sensing studies in large river basins.
None of these cases cover an international water course, but there is technically no difference in
determining river basin parameters from space between national or international river basins. The
satellite data of the examples are all taken from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration — Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (NOAA-AVHRR). This satellite has a
swath width of 2800 km, has a polar orbit and revisits every area twice during daylight hours. There
are two satellites operational, NOAA14 and NOAA 15. Future satellite systems with equivalent
sensors such as demonstrated in Table 1 could be used for these type of applications.
3.2 Selected examples of quantifying river basin processes using satellite measurements with a 1
km spatial resolution
Case 1: Snowmelt and reservoir inflow, Canada
Kite (1995) developed a distributed watershed model dedicated to make maximum use of remotely
sensed data. This distributed hydrological model SLURP uses digital elevation data from public
domain databases accomplished with NOAA-AVHRR images to divide a large watershed into
simulation units with different land cover classes. The runoff from each simulation unit is routed
down the watershed and aggregated to simulate streamflow. Daily NOAA-AVHRR data is used to
classify cloud cover, snow extent and leaf area index. The land cover classes (water, deciduous trees,
coniferous trees, barren land, perennial snow/ice) could also be successfully obtained from NOAA-
AVHRR images. Day-to-day simulations of surface runoff into the reservoir could be calculated and
used for reservoir operations of the upper Columbia watershed. This information is important for
water availability and water diversion to irrigation systems and hydropower generation.
Case 2: Soil moisture in space and time, Iran
Soil moisture is an indication of water stored in the unsaturated zone. Under arid conditions, soil
moisture patterns are a direction indication of the irrigation water distribution or natural seepage
zones holding the soil wet. The Zayandeh Rud basin in Central Iran is a basin hosting millions of
people — the historic city of Esfahan is Iran second largest city and located in the basin — and essential
for Iran's national food production through water diversions. Access to water is equivalent to
possibilities for agriculture and establishment of socio-economic development. The soil moisture
patterns show the inter-annual diversions of irrigation water. Fig. 3A shows the soil moisture fields
during May when winter crops are almost at the end of their growing period, and Fig. 3B expresses
the conditions in August when summer crops are fully emerged. Fig. 3 demonstrates that the lower
part of the basin receives less water and that a minor portion. of the basin has access to huge and
unlimited water amounts; a soil moisture content of 0.40 cm’ cm” throughout the season reveals that
the soils are at field capacity or even wetter. Fig. 3 has been determined without any ground
information. If this basin would have been international, a trained person from an international
organization and knowledgeable on GIS and remote sensing could have prepared this map.
International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXIII, Part B7. Amsterdam 2000. 445