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Comparative assessment of three approaches for deriving stream power plots along long profiles in the upper Hunter River catchment, New South Wales, Australia
Authors:Vikrant Jain   Nicholas Preston   Kirstie Fryirs  Gary Brierley
Affiliation:aDepartment of Physical Geography, Macquarie University, North Ryde, NSW 2109, Australia;bSchool of Earth Sciences, Victoria University of Wellington, P.O. Box 600, Wellington, New Zealand;cSchool of Geography and Environmental Science, The University of Auckland, P.O. Box 92019, Auckland, New Zealand
Abstract:The downstream distribution of stream power is derived and analysed for 11 different streams in the upper Hunter River catchment, Australia. Stream long profiles were produced in a GIS environment using DEM data and catchment area–discharge analysis. These profiles were analysed using three approaches, namely long profile smoothing, curve fitting and a theoretical model. The methodology for deriving stream power profiles using these three approaches is discussed. The long profile smoothing method provides a good approximation of the subcatchment variability in stream power trends. The curve fitting method shows that higher-order exponential curves provide a better fit for long profile data. For the streams of the upper Hunter River catchment, second-order exponential curves fit well with significantly less error. The curve fitting method predicts a bimodal (upstream and midstream) distribution of stream power, which is a deviation from our earlier understanding of a single midstream peak. The theoretical approach provides a mathematical expression of the observed bimodal stream power distribution. The bimodal distribution emphasises the erosion potential of headwater reaches. The resultant stream power distribution provides a catchment-scale characterisation of the distribution of available energy in any given system. Using these approaches, the variability of stream power in headwater reaches is explained by discharge variability, while variability in midstream and downstream reaches is related to high variability in channel gradient.
Keywords:Stream power   Energy distribution   DEM   Long profile   New South Wales (NSW)
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