A drainage basin (also known in North America as a watershed) is a region of land where water from rain or snowmelt drains downhill into a body of water, such as a river, lake, dam, estuary, wetland, sea or ocean. The drainage basin includes both the streams and rivers that convey the water as well as the land surfaces from which water drains into those channels. The drainage basin acts like a funnel - collecting all the water within the area covered by the basin and channeling it into a waterway. Each drainage basin is separated topographically from adjacent basins by a ridge, hill or mountain, which is known as a water divide or sometimes a watershed (in those parts of the world where the drainage basin itself is not called a watershed).
In addition to drainage basin and watershed, the following terms can be used to describe the same concept:
The largest drainage basin in the world is the Amazon, covering 6,144,727 km² (a third of the area of South America).
Today, bioregional democracy can include agreements of states in a particular drainage basin to defend it. These include the Great Lakes Commission, which deals with the largest freshwater drainage basin in the world.
Rain gauge data is used to measure total precipitation over a drainage basin, and there are different ways to interpret that data. If the gauges are many and evenly distributed over an area of uniform precipitation, using the arithmetic mean method will give good results. In the Thiessen polygon method, the watershed is divided into polygons with the rain gauge in the middle of each polygon assumed to be representative for the rainfall on the area of land included in its polygon. These polygons are made by drawing lines between gauges, then making perpendicular bisectors of those lines form the polygons. The isohyetal method involves contours of equal precipitation are drawn over the gauges on a map. Calculating the area between these curves and adding up the volume of water is time consuming.
Measurement of the discharge of water from a basin may be made by a stream gauge located at the basin's outlet.
Drainage basins are important elements to condsider also in ecology. As water flows over the ground and along rivers it can pick up nutrients, sediment, and pollutants. Like the water, they get transported towards the outlet of the basin, and can affect the ecological processes along the way as well as in the receiving water body.
Because drainage basins are coherent entities in a hydrological sense, it has become common to manage water resources on the basis of individual basins. In Minnesota, U.S.A., governmental entities that perform this function are called watershed districts. In New Zealand, they are called catchment boards. Comparable community groups based in Ontario, Canada, are called conservation authorities. In North America this function is referred to as watershed management. In Brazil, the National Policy of Water Resources, regulated by Act n° 9.433 of 1997, establishes the drainage basin as territorial division of Brazilian water management.
Watersheds | Hydrology | Rivers
Povodí | Afvandingsareal | Einzugsgebiet | Cuenca (accidente geográfico) | Valgla | Bassin versant | Batas air | Bacino idrografico | 分水界 | Stroomgebied | Dorzecze | Bacia hidrográfica | Речной бассейн | Watershed | Avrinningsområde | Havza | Водозбірний басейн | 流域
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"Drainage basin".
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