Want this question answered?
Yes, runoff is likely to increase as vegetation in the area decreases. Vegetation plays a crucial role in absorbing and slowing down rainfall, allowing water to infiltrate into the ground. Without vegetation, more water will run off the surface, leading to increased runoff. This can result in higher risks of flooding and erosion.
Rainfall or precipitation. All input comes from runoff from the land, from rivers or erosional windblown sediment. Products of microorganisms and fertilizer in our soils.
it rains 75mm on a 80900m2 watershed. what is the volume of the rainfall excess if 30% of the watershed area is a lake and infiltration on the soil is estimated at 25mm? what is the total volume of runoff? assume that the lake level is low and does not contribute to rainfall excess
Runoff is water that flows over the ground surface. Snowmelt runoff is runoff from melting snow.
interception is the amount of rainfall , which is intercepted and will not infiltrate into the ground or take apart in the runoff process.
Runoff is the result of rainfall.
runoff
Runoff
Runoff
runoff
runoff
Tsong C. Wei has written: 'Effects of areal and time distribution of rainfall on small watershed runoff hydrographs' -- subject(s): Mathematical models, Rain and rainfall, Runoff, Watersheds
Rainfall, Snowmelt, Runoff, naturally occurring springs.
sheet erosion
runoff- the higher the evaporation the lower the drainage desity.the amount of rainfall and infiltration. if there is more rainfall there is less infiltration
In areas where there is no snow, runoff will come from rainfall. However, not all rainfall will produce runoff because storage from soils can absorb light showers. Infiltration excess overland flow more commonly occurs in arid and semi-arid regions, where rainfall intensities are high and the soil infiltration capacity is reduced because of surface sealing, or in paved areas. When the soil is saturated and the depression storage filled, and rain continues to fall, the rainfall will immediately produce surface runoff. Urbanization increases surface runoff, by creating more impervious surfaces such as pavement and buildings, that do not allow percolation of the water down through the soil to the aquifier.
the runoff of the rainfall from the land into rivers and the sea.