4 Strong 5,000--8,000 | 2.7 -- 5.9
V. Strong | 8000--13500 | 6.0 -- 10.00
Severe > 13,500 >"10.0
2.2.2 Soil Erosion Rate: It was ranked in five
grades which was defined by CNHDM as well,
and shown in the Table 2.
Table 2. Erosion Rate
Rank | Description Soil Layer
Loss Time (Yr.)
1 None >1000
2 Relative Danger | 100 -- 1000
3 Danger 20 -- 100
4 V. Danger <20
S Destroyed All gone
2.3 Research Strategy
In order to output a soil erosion map at a large
scale via remote sensing and GIS technologies,
the following strategies were adopted:
1) Considering map usage, several factors appear
on a map:
. Must be match with 1:100,000 scale;
. Must can be obtained from remotely
sensed data or from the other supportive
data;
. Can enhance applications at county level;
. Can suggest future change.
2) Factors were ranked not on theory, but based
on practical experience. In the other words, the
research was application oriented, so even if a
known theory of soil erosion existed it was not
adopted if it could not be implemented smoothly
in practical mapping. Hence the ranking system
for each factor:
» Must be identifiable on remotely sensed
data; or identifiable on the other
supportive data;
° Must be identifiable in the field sampling
sites;
. Be as simple as possible for easy
modeling; but
818
* Establish sufficient ranks for the other
application modification.
3. FACTOR SELECTION AND
GENERATION
Factor selection is very important to soil erosion
mapping on a large scale. In China National Soil
Erosion Survey in the 1980's, landform was used
as a very important factor. The authors, however,
think the landform factor has little influence on
large scale mapping, so this research did not adopt
this factor.
3.1 Rainfall Factor
In the USLE, the rainfall factor was termed as the
Rainfall Index which was calculated based on the
maximum rainfall period. But as the rainfall type
varies, the index is hard to determine. The authors
had no sufficient experimental data and time to
work out which time span, 15 minutes, 30 minutes
or 60 minutes, is optimal for the index calculation,
and which index, Iso, Ico or Iis, could satisfy the
mapping needs in an area of high local relief.
The rainfall factor was simplified, in this research,
in terms of rain coefficient which were defined in
relative values. The research area was delineated
into five subzones according to their annual
precipitation. Any subzone can be taken as a
standard, so the rainfall coefficient in this standard
subzone was set as 1.0. Then the coefficients in
the other subzones were set according to annual
precipitation increment against the standard
precipitation.
3.2 Soil and Parent Material Factor
The soils, though complicated in types, were
ranked into eight grades according to their
resistability to erosion, rather than the erodability
which was adopted by USLE. This inverse setting
was purely for easier manipulation in modeling.
The ranking table is illustrated in Table 3.
International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXI, Part B7. Vienna 1996
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