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Exercise: Watershed Delineation

Objective:

to learn how to use surface hydrologic modeling tools in ArcGIS

1. Perform drive substitution to create drives L (CD) and M (removable drive).


2. Start ArcGIS and create a new map document
3. Watershed Delineation
1. Creating a depressionless DEM
2. Flow direction
3. Flow accumulation
4. Create watershed pour points
5. Delineating watersheds
4. Automatically delineating watersheds ("Basins")
5. Calculating flow length
6. Raster to vector conversion (stream network as line shape)
7. Watershed visualization

Perform drive substitution


Perform drive substitution to create the virtual drives L and M.

Start ArcGIS and open a new map document


1. Delete everything from your removable drive.
2. Create a directory on the hard drive (I suggest C:\Users\NetID\Document\ArcGIS).
This will be used to store files temporarily.

3. Create a directory (M:\hydro). If you create a directory by a different name, make sure to
be consistent. If you create a directory that has spaces anywhere in the pathname, expect
things not to work properly.
4. Open ArcMap.
5. Enable the Spatial Analyst Extension (Customize > Extensions...).
6. Add the layer L:\packgis\forest\dem to the data frame.
7. Set some environment properties (Geoprocessing > Environments)
1. Set the Current Workspace, Scratch Workspace, and Output Extent as below:

2. Set the Cell Size as below.

8. Save the map document as M:\hydro\watershed.mxd.


Watershed Delineation
Creating a depressionless DEM
It is important to start with an elevation grid that has no depressions.
1. Open the ArcToolbox toolset Spatial Analyst Tools > Hydrology. This is where the
surface hydrology tools are located.
2. Open the Fill tool. The input surface is the dem grid. Output is
C:\Users\NetID\Document\ArcGIS\Fill_dem1 (the default name).

While the grid is filling, which may take a few minutes, you might want to entertain
yourself with the Onion.
3. After a few minutes, a new layer, fill_dem1, will be added to the data frame.
This is identical to the dem raster, but any areas of internal drainage are filled in.

Note the difference in the lowest elevation value in the legend; sink cells in the original
data set have been filled in.
4. Delete the dem layer from the data frame, since you will be working on the filled grid
from this point on.
It is important to have a depressionless DEM for all subsequent hydrological analyses. Areas of
internal drainage can cause problems later in the watershed delineation process.
Flow direction
1. Open the Flow Direction tool.
1. The input surface is the Fill_dem1 grid.
2. The output raster should be set to
C:\Users\NetID\Document\ArcGIS\FlowDir_fill1 (the default)

2. Turn off display of the Filled dem layer.


3. Add the layer L:\packgis\forest\streams to the data frame You should start to see some
patterns.
4. Note that the numbers refer to coded direction of flow.

Direction of flow must be known for each cell, because it is direction of flow that determines the
ultimate destination of water flowing across the surface.
Flow accumulation
1. Open the Flow Accumulation tool.

1. Set the input flow direction raster (FlowDir_fill1) to the output of the last task.
2. Set the output raster to C:\Users\NetID\Document\ArcGIS\FlowAcc_flow1
(default name).

2. Turn off the Flow Direction layer. The flow accumulation layer has a value for each cell;
that value represents the number of cells upstream from that cell. Cells with higher values
will tend to be located in drainage channels rather than on hillsides or ridges.
3. In order to make each flow is visable, you need to modify the symbology to make it
work. If you are in the MGH lab, since the map server is done and can not be fixed so
far, if you can not run the "Symbology" to classify, you need to reverse the color
ramp in the symbology -> Stretched tab. Adjust your color ramp from WHITE to

BLACK, as the following snapshot.

4. If you are working this in the Suzzallo Lib or your own computer, please follow the
following steps: alter the legend for this layer. It will be easier to visualize high-flow
pathways by altering how cells are displayed.
1. Change the symbology method to classified. Use 2 classes.

2. Alter the break value for the first class to 5000.

3. Change the symbology (no color for the first class, red for the second class).

Now the cells that are displayed in red have the flow of at least 5000 upstream
cells flowing through them. This translates to an upstream area of 11.5 acres. 5000
cells * (100 ft^2 / cell) * (1 ac / 43560 ft^2) = 11.5 ac.
You should also see that the DEM-generated drainage network looks
somewhat like the vector streams, although if you look at details you will see
where the data sets do not line up.

You will need to zoom in before you can see the details of the flow network.

Flow accumulations are important because they allow us to locate cells with high
cumulative flow. Pour points must be located in cells of high cumulative flow, or the
resultant watersheds will be very small.
5. Use ArcCatalog now to copy the fill, flow direction, and flow accumulation grids to
M:\hydro (this will require about 65 MB of space).
Create watershed outlet ("pour") points
1. Create a new point shapefile in ArcCatalog (M:\hydro\pour_points; copy the
coordinate system parameters from one of the other Pack Forest data sets).
2. Add the point layer to your map document.
3. Download this zipped generate file (pour.zip) which has two boxes indicating the location
to create pour points.

4. Add the new point layer to your data frame and begin editing (edit the folder that
contains the point data set you created in step 1).
5. In order to see better where you are adding points, open a magnifier window (Window >
Magnifier).

6. You may need to zoom in and increase the zoom factor of the magnifier (right-click the
magnifier's title bar and select Properties) before adding any points.
7. Use the Identify tool to examine the values of the Flow Accumulation layer before
adding any points. You will be able to tell which direction the stream is flowing by
looking at the elevations of a number of identified points. Upstream locations will have
lower accumulation value and downstream will have higher accumulation value (why is
this?).
8. Start editing (make sure you specify the correct folder to edit). Add points at high-flow
locations. Refer to the images below for more precise placement.
Western point: note the position of 27 Creek (the stream network in the center of this
image of the data frame). The watershed we are creating is just west of 27 Creek's
confluence with the Mashel River. At that location, there is no stream in the vector data.

Eastern point: this watershed (Little Mashel) is east of 27 Creek. The pour point is
upstream of the confluence on the Little Mashel River.

You must zoom in quite a way to do this, otherwise your pour point may not be
located within a high-flow pathway!
If your points are not in a high-flow pathway, move them before proceeding.

9.
Everything upstream from each one of these points will define a single watershed.
10. Open the attribute table for the pour_points layer. Alter the ID field to represent unique
values for each different record (e.g., 1 and 2). Watersheds are defined by pour point IDs;
if you do not alter the ID values for the points, there will be only one value, and you will
not generate unique watershed areas.

11. Once you have added the points and altered their IDs, stop editing the layer, making sure
to save the edits.
12. Select Geoprocessing > Environments > Processing Extent to make sure the output
extent the same as the filled DEM (fill_dem1) so the extent will be correct (you don't
want the watershed truncated). Also set the cell size in Raster Analysis.

13. The watersheds are not generated directly from point features, but by raster cells. In order
to convert the points to a grid, use the tool Spatial Analyst Tools> Hydrology > Snap
Pour Point or Conversion Tools>To Raster>Point to Raster

Alter the drawing order so you can see all the layers clearly. Zoom in as needed to verify
that the new cells overlap with the high-flow pathway.

If the Analysis Extent and cell size do not match an existing layer, there may be problems
of registration between the pour grid and the other grids necessary to delineate
watersheds. Therefore, it is always a good idea to set your cell size and analysis extent
relative to an existing grid layer.
Note that the new feature_pour1 layer cell covers the place where the last pour point
was added. If the pour grid cells are not in high-flow pathways, the watersheds you create
will be small. If the pour grid cells are not directly "over" the flow path, you will not
create watersheds that represent large drainage areas.
Delineating watersheds
1. Open the Watershed tool. Note that one of the options for the input data (as shown
below) is the point feature dataset (pour_points). DO NOT USE THE POINTS!!
Selecting a point feature dataset will work in theory, but there is no way to verify your
point features will fall in a high-flow pathway. That is the reason for the conversion to
raster in the previous step. It is recommended to have converted the points to a grid first,
which verifies that the pour point locations are in the high-flow pathway.
1. Select the flow direction grid as the input flow direction raster.

2. Select the raster version of the pour points as the input raster.
3. Accept the other defaults.

2. The new watershed grid will be added to the data frame.

These two large grid zones represent the areas upstream from the selected pour points.
The western pour point defines the entire watershed system (both grid zones). The basin
to the south and east is really a sub-basin of the larger system. Its pour point is upstream
of the western pour point.
3. You can verify this by altering the drawing order and zooming into the upstream pour
point. Note how the sub-basin contains the drainage network for its sub-basin. Remember
this pour point was selected to be upstream of the confluence.

You have just delineated two watersheds, based on your elevation grid data and the pour
points you chose. If your watersheds are very small, it is because you located your pour
points outside of a high-flow pathway, or you did not fill your original input elevation
grid.
Automatically delineating watersheds
Compare your manual method with an automated method.
1. Open the Basin tool.
1. Select the previously created flow direction grid.

The automatically delineated watersheds are defined by pour points at the edge of
the grid.

2. Convert these to polygons as well in order to see where the watershed boundaries
are. Make sure to uncheck Simplify polygons in order to match the actual grid
zone boundaries rather than generalizing lines in the output.

3. Zoom to the northwest of the grid. You can see a number of very small basins.

4. Open the attribute table for the new polygon data set. There are 413 basins.

You have just let ArcGIS automatically generate a series of watersheds. Automatic watershed
delineation is easy, but does not give you the control to create basins specifically for pour points
of your own selection. For this reason, the manual method is used almost exclusively.
Calculating flow length
Flow length shows the distance water will need to travel across the grid.
1. Open the Flow Length tool.
1. The input raster is the flow direction grid created earlier.
2. Use defaults for the other controls.

2. Alter the color ramp so you can see the differences between low flow length and high
flow length areas. In this color ramp, the red cells are at the upper reaches of streams in
the forest, and the blue cells are farther downstream.

This shows the flow length to the ultimate pour point for each cell. Suppose you want the
flow length to the closest downstream high-flow pathway, rather than to the ultimate
outlet. This is possible, using flow length with a weighting grid.
3. Create the weight grid by making a grid whose values are no data within the 5000-cell
high-flow path, and values of 1 elsewhere. This is done with a setnull function in the
Raster Calculator:

This calculation means:


"make a new grid; where the flow accumulation cells have a value greater than or equal
to 5000 in value, make those output cells null; where the flow accumulation cells are less
than 5000 in value, make the output cells have a value of 1"

4. Use the new grid as a weight grid in the flow length tool.

5. The output grid now has values that represent the flowlength-distance to the closest highflow pathway rather than to the ultimate outlet.

Raster to vector conversion (stream network as line shape)


Raster data sets can represent drainage networks (e.g., the flow accumulation cells that have at
least 5000 upstream cells). When making maps that present the results of watershed delineation
you may want to show the grid-based flow network instead of, or in addition to, the vector
stream network, especially if the two flow networks do not agree.
1. First, create a grid that represents only high-flow (5000 +) cells. This is also done in the
Raster Calculator, similar to what was done in the last step.

2. Open the Stream to Feature tool.


1. The input stream raster is the result of the last calculation.
2. The input flow direction raster is the flow direction grid that was made before.

Watershed visualization
The last step for this lesson will be to visualize the watersheds created earlier with other data.
1. Create a new data frame.
2. Add a copy of the grid layer fill_dem1 from the other data frame.
3. Create a hillshade grid from fill_dem1.
4. Add the pour_points point feature layer.
5. Add the line feature layers Contour and Streams from the CD.
6. Add a copy of the watershed1.shp polygon feature layer.
7. Alter its legend so that is is not filled and displayed with a red outline.

8. Alter the drawing order and legends so that features are discernible. Does this look
reasonable to you?

9. Visualizing in ArcScene can also be helpful.

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