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Countries around the world face increasing populations,
with no corresponding increase in water supply. Problems of
conserving and allocating water become, as a consequence, more and
more acute, more and more pressing. Fortunately, recent
advancements in data collection and software technology are now
helping scientists better model how water behaves.
With its ability to pull spatial data from different sources into
an integrated environment, GIS simplifies the process of preparing
data for hydrologic and hydraulic modeling, and greatly extends the
analytical power of the model. Applications such as watershed
delineation, topographic characteristic extraction, floodplain
extent determination, and others, provide an informed basis for
sound decision making for water resource professionals.
The papers in this book were among those presented at the 1999 ESRI
International User Conference on hydrologic and hydraulic water
quantity modeling support using GIS. Although the models featured
were developed for specific applications, the techniques presented
apply to any hydrologic or hydraulic model that requires spatial
input or that produces spatial output.
About the
editors:
David R. Maidment is the
world’s leading authority on water resources and GIS. He is
director of the Center for Research in Water Resources of the
University of Texas at Austin. He is the editor of Hydrologic
and Hydraulic Modeling Support with GIS and Arc
Hydro: GIS for Water Resources
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