Abstract
Abstract. The theory that forms the basis of TOPMODEL (a topography-based hydrological model) was first outlined by Mike Kirkby some 45 years ago. This paper recalls some of the early developments, the rejection of the first journal paper, the early days of digital terrain analysis, model calibration and validation, the various criticisms of the simplifying assumptions, and the relaxation of those assumptions in the dynamic forms of TOPMODEL. A final section addresses the question of what might be done now in seeking a simple, parametrically parsimonious model of hillslope and small catchment processes if we were starting again.- Cite:
- Keith Beven, M. J. Kirkby, Jim Freer, and Robert A. Lamb. 2021. A history of TOPMODEL. Hydrology and Earth System Sciences, Volume 25, Issue 2, 25(2):527–549.
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@article{Beven-2021-A, title = "A history of TOPMODEL", author = "Beven, Keith and Kirkby, M. J. and Freer, Jim and Lamb, Robert A.", journal = "Hydrology and Earth System Sciences, Volume 25, Issue 2", volume = "25", number = "2", year = "2021", publisher = "Copernicus GmbH", url = "https://gwf-uwaterloo.github.io/gwf-publications/G21-72001", doi = "10.5194/hess-25-527-2021", pages = "527--549", abstract = "Abstract. The theory that forms the basis of TOPMODEL (a topography-based hydrological model) was first outlined by Mike Kirkby some 45 years ago. This paper recalls some of the early developments, the rejection of the first journal paper, the early days of digital terrain analysis, model calibration and validation, the various criticisms of the simplifying assumptions, and the relaxation of those assumptions in the dynamic forms of TOPMODEL. A final section addresses the question of what might be done now in seeking a simple, parametrically parsimonious model of hillslope and small catchment processes if we were starting again.", }
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%0 Journal Article %T A history of TOPMODEL %A Beven, Keith %A Kirkby, M. J. %A Freer, Jim %A Lamb, Robert A. %J Hydrology and Earth System Sciences, Volume 25, Issue 2 %D 2021 %V 25 %N 2 %I Copernicus GmbH %F Beven-2021-A %X Abstract. The theory that forms the basis of TOPMODEL (a topography-based hydrological model) was first outlined by Mike Kirkby some 45 years ago. This paper recalls some of the early developments, the rejection of the first journal paper, the early days of digital terrain analysis, model calibration and validation, the various criticisms of the simplifying assumptions, and the relaxation of those assumptions in the dynamic forms of TOPMODEL. A final section addresses the question of what might be done now in seeking a simple, parametrically parsimonious model of hillslope and small catchment processes if we were starting again. %R 10.5194/hess-25-527-2021 %U https://gwf-uwaterloo.github.io/gwf-publications/G21-72001 %U https://doi.org/10.5194/hess-25-527-2021 %P 527-549
Markdown (Informal)
[A history of TOPMODEL](https://gwf-uwaterloo.github.io/gwf-publications/G21-72001) (Beven et al., GWF 2021)
- A history of TOPMODEL (Beven et al., GWF 2021)
ACL
- Keith Beven, M. J. Kirkby, Jim Freer, and Robert A. Lamb. 2021. A history of TOPMODEL. Hydrology and Earth System Sciences, Volume 25, Issue 2, 25(2):527–549.