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Effect of historic land cover change on runoff curve number estimation in Iowa

January 1, 2010

Within three decades of European-descended settlers arriving in Iowa, much of the land cover across the state was transformed from prairie and forest to farmland, patches of forest, and urbanized areas. Between 1832 and 1859, the General Land Office surveyed the state of Iowa to aid in the disbursement of land. In 1875, an illustrated atlas of the State of Iowa was published. Using these two data resources for classifying land cover, the hydrologic impact of the land cover change resulting from the first three decades of settlement is presented in terms of the effect on the area-weighted average curve number, a term commonly used to predict runoff from rainstorms. In the four watersheds studied, the area-weighted average curve number increased by a mean of 16.4 from 61.4 to 77.8 with the greatest magnitude of change occurring in the two western Iowa watersheds as opposed to the two more heavily forested eastern Iowa watersheds.

Publication Year 2010
Title Effect of historic land cover change on runoff curve number estimation in Iowa
DOI 10.1061/(ASCE)HE.1943-5584.0000234
Authors Loren L. Wehmeyer, Frank H. Weirich
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Journal of Hydrologic Engineering
Index ID 70035813
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization North Carolina Water Science Center
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