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Lan Zeng, Haoyong Shen, Yali Cui, Xuefeng Chu and Jingli Shao
Surface depressions are one of the important impact factors of hydrologic processes and catchment responses. However, in many hydrologic models, the influence of depressions is often simulated in a lumped manner, which results in the insufficient charact...
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Kendall Grimm, Mohsen Tahmasebi Nasab and Xuefeng Chu
The topographic wetness index (TWI) has been widely used for determining the potential of each digital elevation model (DEM) grid to develop a saturated condition, which allows for the investigation of topographic control on the hydrologic response of a ...
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Mohsen Tahmasebi Nasab, Vishal Singh, Xuefeng Chu
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Modeling hydrologic processes for depression-dominated areas such as the North American Prairie Pothole Region is complex and reliant on a clear understanding of dynamic filling-spilling-merging-splitting processes of numerous depressions over the surfac...
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Xingwei Liu, Ning Wang, Jingli Shao and Xuefeng Chu
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Jianli Zhang and Xuefeng Chu
DEM-based topographic characterization and quantification of surface depression storage are critical to hydrologic and environmental modeling. Mixed conclusions have been obtained from previous studies on the relationship between maximum depression stora...
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