Geomorphometry and Landform Mapping, What Is A Landform
Geomorphometry and Landform Mapping, What Is A Landform
Geomorphology
j o u r n a l h o m e p a g e : w w w. e l s ev i e r. c o m / l o c a t e / g e o m o r p h
a r t i c l e
i n f o
Article history:
Accepted 8 September 2010
Available online 27 March 2011
Keywords:
Scaling
Allometry
Operational denitions
Landform delimitation
DEMs
a b s t r a c t
Starting from a concept of the land surface, its denition and subdivision from Digital Elevation Models
(DEMs) is considered. High-resolution DEMs from active remote sensing form a new basis for
geomorphological work, which is moving on from consideration of whether data are accurate enough to
how the surface of interest can be dened from an overabundance of data. Discussion of the operational
denition and delimitation of specic landforms of varying degrees of difculty, from craters to mountains, is
followed by the applicability of fuzzy boundaries. Scaling, usually allometric, is shown to be compatible with
the scale-specicity of many landforms: this is exemplied by glacial cirques and drumlins. Classication of a
whole land surface is more difcult than extraction of specic landforms from it. Well-dissected uvial
landscapes pose great challenges for areal analyses. These are tackled by the delimitation of homogeneous
elementary forms and/or land elements in which slope position is considered. The boundaries are mainly
breaks in gradient or aspect, but may also be in some type of curvature: breaks in altitude are rare. Elementary
forms or land elements are grouped together into functional regions (landforms) such as hill sheds. It may
often be useful to recognise fuzziness of membership, or core and periphery of a surface object.
Plains and etched or scoured surfaces defy most of these approaches, and general geomorphometry remains
the most widely applicable technique. It has been applied mainly within arbitrary areas, and to some extent to
drainage basins, but more experimentation with mountain ranges and other landforms or landform regions is
needed. Geomorphological mapping is becoming more specialised, and its legends are being simplied. Its
incorporation into geographical information systems (GIS) has required greater precision with denitions,
and the separation of thematic layers, so that it is converging with specic geomorphometry and becoming
more exible and more applicable, with a broader range of visualisation techniques.
2011 Published by Elsevier B.V.
1. Introduction
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Fig. 1. Comparison of drumlins mapped for an area close to Loch Lomond in Scotland by (a) intensive eld mapping by J. Rose. Drumlins, crestlines and summits are mapped. The
esker (marked E) was erroneously mapped as two drumlins in (b), mapping from the NEXTMap 5 m DEM. In (b) solid black drumlins coincide with eld mapping; black outlines are
those found from the DEM but not in the eld, and the boxes highlight areas where eld mapping found examples that were not seen in the DEM.
From Clark et al. (2009).
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1.5 m. It does not end there, but a long tradition in slope studies
involves measuring over this slope length, notably with Pitty's (1971
pp. 402404; Cox, 1990) slope pantometer. Finer-scale variation is
described as microrelief, although its upper limit has rarely been
clearly dened. Whatever the pros and cons of generalising to 1 or 2
m, it does give a common basis from which measurements can be
compared.
Many geomorphologists have focused on the surface smoothed at
a scale of a few metres. In slope prole survey, Young (1972 p. 146)
recommended that No measured length shall be more than 20 m or
less than 2 m for topography of normal scale. Gerrard and
Robinson (1971) analysed gradients for xed measured lengths
from 1.5 m to 10 m, and discussed the effects of small protrusions and
depressions (microrelief) that can give variations of a few degrees for
measuring lengths of a few metres. Pitty (1971) advocated xed
lengths and used a frame giving a constant slope length of 1.5 m
(previously 5 feet, i.e. 1.52 m) for gradient measurement: this human
scale relates to the practicality of one-person operation. Debate
concerning xed versus variable measuring lengths along proles
continued (Cox, 1990) and had some parallels with the debate about
xed grids, adaptive grids and irregular triangulations as bases for
DEMs. In slope proling the basic idea was to exclude individual
particles (stones), minor bumps and depressions, and repeated
microrelief such as earth hummocks (best analysed separately, by
appropriate means of analysis, as are vertical cliffs, overhangs, pipes
and caves). The inuence of grain size was removed; boulders would
generally be avoided. Buildings and vegetation were also excluded.
Boulders several metres long, for example in rockfall or glacial
deposits, pose a problem. If they sit on the surface, they can be
excluded from the concept of land surface in the same way as trees or
buildings. If the boulders are close together or partly buried (and all
degrees of burial exist), however, it is more appealing to pass a surface
through the boulders, either averaged if the boulders are close
together, or interpolated from the surrounding surface if this is
relatively smooth. Thus, we reach a geomorphological concept of the
(real) land surface, with a lower limiting scale of a metre or two, and
relating to the ground, a continuous body or aggregate of material,
rather than to individual particles. Wherever human modication is
considerable, this is not the natural land surface, which leads to
difculties discussed below. Exclusion of caves etc. is a necessary
simplication to give a single-valued surface as a function of horizontal coordinates, permitting representation by a DEM. Here DEM is
used in the narrower sense, as in Hengl and Reuter (2009): elevation
(altitude) values for a gridded set of points in Cartesian coordinates.
Technological progress has made DEMs an increasingly important
basis for geomorphological research.
3. Dening the land surface on DEMs
Until recently, reliable measurements at 1 to 10 m scale required
eldwork. Early DEMs were coarse (with horizontal resolutions grid
mesh spacings around 100 m) and mainly derived from contours
manually digitised from medium scale maps (Tobler, 1969), e.g. at 1:
50,000 or 1: 25,000 or even small-scale, 1: 250,000. Better quality
was obtained by photogrammetry, e.g. the 10 m DEM used by
Hancock et al. (2006), or at large scales for engineering works or from
photos taken in the eld (Lane, 1998), covering limited areas. It is well
known that mean and standard deviation of slope gradient reduce
rapidly as measured from coarser grids (Evans, 1972: Deng et al.,
2007). Although altitude and regional variables may be insensitive to
scale (Shary et al., 2005), curvatures are affected even more than
gradients: an order-of-magnitude gap remained, between most DEMbased calculations and 1 m scale eld measurements. Having rejected
the fractal model in this context (Evans and McClean, 1995; McClean
and Evans, 2000), it was clear that extrapolation was dangerous. In
particular, gradients and curvatures from the coarse DEMs of the
1970s and 1980s (50 m or 100 m mesh: Evans, 1980) could hardly be
compared with eld-based measurements of slope proles (Young,
1972; Parsons, 1988; Cox, 1990).
Sampling adequacy was also of great concern, together with the
effects of errors in DEMs interpolated from contours (Wise, 2007). For
example, as streams typically do not cooperate by passing through
grid points, the related low points could often be missed, creating
spurious pits upstream. Smoothing does not solve this problem, and
lling the sink by raising levels up to the apparent outlet creates
artefactual plains and falsies data at many grid points. Rather than
raising points over an area, it is better to lower points along a drainage
line, as this is equivalent to displacing them (by less than one grid
mesh) to the position of the presumed nearby channel, and fewer data
points are modied. Pits can be removed by breaching (Martz and
Garbrecht, 1999) or carving (Soille et al., 2003), yet it is dangerous to
apply this automatically as even in uvial topographies real depressions occur, becoming very common not only in karst areas but
also in areas of eluviation of nes, or of deation (Reuter et al., 2009;
Li et al., 2011). A large body of literature grew up on drainage tracing
from DEMs (Gruber and Peckham, 2009), but the possibility remained
of major mis-assignments of drainage direction because of channels
missed between well-spaced grid points. These algorithms could not
match the accuracy of drainage nets plotted directly from air photos.
With the development of two types of active remote sensing,
things are now very different (Nelson et al., 2009; Reuter et al., 2009;
Smith and Pain, 2009). Radar-based products are available at various
resolutions. Airborne Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar
(IFSAR) can be own at high altitudes and fast speeds, covering
large areas with few problems from weather. Western Europe and the
conterminous USA are covered by the 5 m resolution NEXTMap IFSAR
DEM. For Britain this was provided in two versions, the initial product
(digital surface model: DSM) showing forests, hedges and buildings,
and a smoothed product (digital terrain model enhanced: DTME)
where these had been ltered out. Livingstone et al. (2008) mapped
drumlins, glacial lineations and other features in much of northern
England, manually interpreting hill-shaded NEXTMap DEMs with two
orthogonal illumination directions, as well as a slope gradient map.
Interestingly, they worked mainly from the initial DSM product
because it retained relevant detail lost in the ltering process. A
number of workers using visual interpretation have preferred to use
the unltered DSM, but it would be difcult to automate landform
recognition without ltering out vegetation and buildings.
Laser scanning can give such dense point clouds that gridding at 1
m represents generalisation. Once we could process last returns as
well as rst returns, the ground and not just the forest canopy could
be mapped accurately from the air, and absolute vertical accuracies
better than 0.3 m could be achieved (Pirotti and Tarolli, 2010). Under
dense forest, however, the bare earth DEM is interpolated from fewer
points and is less accurate than elsewhere because only a small
proportion of returns are from the ground (Norheim et al., 2002).
Although airborne laser scanning (LiDAR: Light Detection and Ranging) is expensive, it is so promising, especially for hazard evaluation,
that coverage of laser-based DEMs with 1 m resolution is rapidly
increasing: for example, for the whole of Switzerland below 2000 m,
and for entire Lnder in Austria. Belgium, the Netherlands and Alberta
are covered at 2 to 5 m resolution. Terrestrial laser scanning can provide even greater detail for individual landforms, and even for coarsegrained sediments (Hodge et al., 2009): in studying overland ow,
(Smith et al., 2010) use a 2 mm resolution DEM. With ne-resolution
LiDAR, many old problems fade, and new ones appear. Error
assessment is changed radically (Fisher and Tate, 2006): technical
errors have become rather small, but errors of denition remain and
loom large.
Laser and radar returns produce data some of which is of
geomorphological interest, and some not. We have to think even
more carefully, exactly what is the land surface? What version of the
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especially with conceptualisation, operational denition and delimitation. As yet, delimitation of specic forms is mainly manual, using
visual identication: automation of the process remains a research
frontier, with acceptable success rates somewhat elusive. Progress is
being made with both supervised and unsupervised classication of
DEMs (Seijmonsbergen et al., in press).
Islands and lakes form special cases that can be delimited precisely
by the water level at a given time, although this does vary a few m even
within a year, and much more over the long term. Nunataks are
likewise limited by the ice surface, which also varies over the years. On
the other hand it could be argued that the true landform of an island or
nunatak extends below the water or ice, for example giving the true
height of Mauna Loa, Hawaii (over the Pacic Ocean oor) as 10,099 m.
The more clearly a landform can be dened, the more likely is it to be
the subject of a morphometric study, i.e. of specic geomorphometry
(Goudie, 1990; Evans, 2010). In glacial geomorphology, this has meant
drumlins, lake basins and cirques, but studies have been extended to
ribbed moraine, megascale glacial lineations, and troughs.
Drumlins and many other depositional or mobile forms have
limited vertical dimension and are, thus, poorly portrayed on standard
contour maps. Fieldwork and air photo interpretation have been
essential in achieving accurate mapping (Rose and Smith, 2008).
Although drumlins are clearly dened, multi-convex landforms,
Smith and Wise (2007) showed that the number identied increased
considerably as satellite image resolution increased (from 30 m to 15
m). Probably the same applies to increasing DEM resolution. Smith
et al. (2006) used visual interpretation of LiDAR data gridded at 2 m
both to check and to improve on eld-based mapping of drumlins.
Differences occurred in both directions, but the LiDAR data permit
subtle hummocks and lineations to be noticed that were missed in the
eld. Bedrock distribution, however, is less clear on the LiDAR images
than in the eld. DEMs from digitised contours on 1: 50,000 and 1:
10,000 maps were inadequate for drumlin delimitation, and satellite
radar data at both 90 m and 25 m horizontal resolution provided no
useful data (Smith et al., 2006 Fig. 4).
Unfortunately the LiDAR data were available for only a small area
and both this and later British studies made extensive use of
NEXTMap airborne radar-based DEMs at 5 m resolution. Fig. 1
compares the delimitations of this set of landforms, showing both
superiority to eld data and some omissions (Clark et al., 2009). While
not as detailed as LiDAR data, NEXTMap has proved a very useful
source for the manual identication of glacial depositional forms and
has shown patterns which had not been recognised in the eld or
from air photos. The identication of drumlins requires high-quality
data, but once recognised they should be relatively easy to delimit
(either manually or automatically).
Smith et al. (2009) have developed a cookie cutter tool for rst
approximations to the volume of convex (or concave) landforms in
relation to a horizontal plane. They used it to calculate the volumes of
drumlins by superimposing digitised outlines onto the 5 m DEM. The
outlines are delimited manually, so the technique is described as
semi-automated.
Visual interpretation of elongate features from a hill-shaded model
is biased by the direction of illumination used (Smith and Clark, 2005;
Smith and Wise, 2007). It is necessary to use multiple directions I
suggest at least four, as does Smith and to combine interpretations
from the different models. This can be cumbersome, and it would be
desirable to automate boundary delimitation by direct processing
of the DEM. A map of slope gradient is equivalent to a vertically
illuminated model (with contrast enhancement), and it eliminates
bias. The outer boundaries of drumlins are essentially concave breaks
in slope, whether they are surrounded by lower areas or contiguous
with other drumlins. Slope gradient steepens away from the summit:
if this prole convexity is followed by a basal concavity, postglacial
redistribution of material by wash or creep is suspected. It is usually
assumed that postglacial modication has been slight, except where
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rivers or former meltwater channels have cut into drumlins and left
obviously anomalous steep bluffs. The main complications are where
younger drumlins are superimposed on larger ones that have been
only partially remoulded, and where long streamlined tails merge
into a hillside. Many drumlins contain some bedrock, but Clark et al.
(2009) exclude those which are entirely bedrock and focus on
drumlins formed in deformable materials.
Most bedforms are mobile and should, therefore, be categorised as
neither depositional nor erosional. Fluvial and aeolian bedforms (such
as dunes and bars of various types) have more in common with each
other than either class has with glacial bedforms. They also evolve
faster and are more accessible to study, so that the growth and decay
of individuals can be studied over time, unlike most bedrock erosional
forms. Dunes vary from the easily delimited barchan, where mobile
material is sparse, to the complicated coalescent patterns of akl and
compound dunes.
Volcanic and meteoritic craters are the most easily dened
erosional features, because of sharp convexities often separating
opposing slopes. Yardangs and whalebacks are fairly well delimited.
Another easily delimited form is a lake basin, but if we are interested
in the rock surface underlying its sedimentary ll, expensive geophysical survey is required. Pingos usually have a sharp basal concave
break in slope that clearly delimits them. Volcanoes are rather more
difcult because broad pediments of lava or lahar deposits may merge
Fig. 2. Sale Pot, (251E,5430N) in the High Street Range above Hawes Water,
Northern England, is a welldenedvalleyhead cirque with a minor bog and a clear
threshold; it is eroded into mixed Borrowdale Volcanic rocks. Its drainage divide
(dashed), crest (solid line), downvalley limit and oor: headwall boundary (dashed)
are indicated. Contours are shown every 50 m. F: Cirque focus, middle of threshold. The
median axis is drawn from F so that area on left = area on right. It intersects the crest
at 6. Length (of axis) = 590 m; width (normal to axis) = 790 m. Axis aspect = 121;
wall aspect = 085 (steeper wall faces north and east). Altitudes: 1. lowest, 520 m;
2. oor modal, 525 m; 3. max oor 582 m; 4. max crest 772 m; 5. max above 792 m;
6. median crest 752 m. 7. Grid reference, middle of axis: 3443 east, 5123 north. 8. 30 m
fall in 18 m: max gradient = 59; 9. 10 m fall in 195 m: min gradient = 2.9. 10. Wall
height = 770-570 = 200 m (max along any slope line). C: the col here cuts two 10 m
contours, but 20 m this is below the minimum depth requirement (30 m), hence
col = 0. MMM Terminal moraine. planclos = (360-298) + 110 = 172 (measured
over 100 m lengths, the mid-height contour, at 650 m, heads toward 298, turns
clockwise through north, and reaches 110).
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Fig. 3. Denition of cirques and cirque oors in the Iezer Range, Romania. From Cirque denition map of Iezer Mountains.
North is at top. From Mndrescu et al. (2010).
30, 100 and 150 m. This concept of height above the lowest closed
contour within which a peak is the highest point prominence or
summit magnitude is now widely used by mountaineers (http://
www.peaklist.org/WWlists/WorldTop50.html). It permits nested
mountains, contrary to Quine's point (c).
Quine concluded with a theorem:
the boundary of a mountain is the outermost contour line that
lies wholly within ten degrees of steepness from the summit and
partly within twenty.
We may argue with the arbitrary summit magnitude thresholds,
with Quine's arbitrary (10, 20, 1000 feet) thresholds, or with the
need for a contour as the boundary. Macmillan (personal communication 2010) prefers a boundary inclined down-valley. This is relevant
to a binary distinction between mountain and valley. Those starting
from supposedly equivalent terms to mountain in other languages
are very likely to propose different thresholds (Mark and Smith,
2004). But unless our denition includes some such arbitrary criteria,
it is unlikely to be operational that is, to be applicable consistently in
practice. The most fundamental property of the type mountain is
being convex (Mark and Smith, 2004) and large/high: each of these
can be measured quantitatively and can, thus, be the basis of a
denition if international scientists can agree, whatever the variations
in common speech. It must be accepted, however, that mountain is a
vaguer term than cirque, drumlin, crater or landslide, and different
denitions may be useful in different contexts.
At the least, each geomorphological study should state specically
the landform denitions it is attempting to employ. Terms such as
small, short, light or weak are usefully kept relative, not absolute, but
landforms should not be dened in a relative (contextual) way if they
are to be mapped or measured. Thus, operational denitions are
needed for all landforms to which specic morphometry is applied. In
this respect, some studies are more opaque than others: the need for
transparency is axiomatic. Geomorphological mappers have a poor
record in providing operational denitions of the terms in their map
keys.
Currently most landform delimitation is by on-screen digitising of
manually identied boundaries, on maps, satellite images or rectied
air photos (Clark et al., 2009). Much can be done using Google Earth.
Two decades after the pioneer efforts of Tribe (1991), automated
identication of specic types of landform remains difcult (van
Asselen and Seijmonsbergen, 2006). We should be able to do better, at
2000
Length
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Width
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Amplitude
200
100
-2
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b
Dimensions (m), logarithmic scale
100
Width
500
Length
200
Amplitude
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418 cirques:
Wales & Lake District
-3
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-1
a
length regression
width regression
amplitude regression
length (m)
width (m)
amplitude (m)
5000
2000
1000
500
200
100
546 cirques,
B.C. Coast Mountains
200
500
1000
2000
Size (m)
b
length (m)
length regression
width (m)
width regression
amplitude regression
amplitude (m)
2000
1000
500
200
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418 cirques,
Wales and Cumbria
200
500
1000
Size (m)
Fig. 5. Allometric plots of cirques in (a) British Columbia (Cayoosh, Bendor and Shulaps
Ranges of the southern Coast Mountains), and (b) Wales and the English Lake District.
Vertical scales are dimensions in metres.
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For both drumlins and cirques (Evans, 2010 table 5 and p. 145) the
resulting geometric standard deviations of length are around 0.2 on a
log10 scale; this is equivalent to multiplying or dividing by 100.2, i.e. by
1.6. Combined with symmetrical histograms, and linear quantile
quantile plots (Fig. 4), this is good evidence that the distributions are
unimodal and the landforms are scale-specic. The log-normal (logGaussian) model may be accepted as a rst approximation, and
regressions and correlations should be performed on logarithmic
scales. The main differences between the two data sets in Fig. 4 are
that the British Columbian cirques are longer (geometric mean 705 m
cf. 591 m for the British) and higher (geometric mean amplitude 301
m cf. 221 m). Geometric mean widths are 670 m and 674 m respectively. Geometric standard deviations are higher for British Columbia,
but all are between 0.16 and 0.21 (log10 scale).
Evidence from the literature, reviewed for example in Evans
(2003), suggests that similar considerations apply to other glacial and
uvial bedforms, to sinkholes (dolines), karren, karst towers, tors,
impact craters, pingos, volcanoes and to some tectonic forms: all are
scale-specic, regionally if not globally. The magnitudefrequency
distributions of landslides, which cover a greater range of scales than
cirques, have of late generated some controversy. They follow a power
law (a negative Pareto distribution), but only over a limited range of
scales. With due allowance for the censoring of distributions
distortion by the incompleteness of detection of smaller features or
the infrequency of very large features I conclude that landslides too
are scale-specic, especially for particular types or for clusters
produced by single events (Evans, 2010). The lower size limit reects
a threshold critical mass: the upper size limit may reect the frame,
the available slope relief.
A further type of scale-specicity is where breaks in slope occur in
plots of frequency against size, as in some landslide distributions
(Brardinoni and Church, 2004), or of one dimension against another,
for example the depth and diameter of impact craters (Pike, 1980). In
these cases, scaling is combined with scale-specicity. More generally,
scaling is observed within the single order of linear magnitude (two
orders of areal magnitude) embraced by drumlins or cirques. Fig. 5
shows how different size variables scale with a combined, overall
measure of size (the cube root of length width vertical amplitude).
Again the greater lengths and amplitudes in British Columbia are
noticeable, but the gradients of the three logarithmic regressions are
very similar in the two study areas. The vertical amplitude of cirques
increases with overall size more slowly than do length and width.
With 95% condence limits, the respective exponents are 1.10 0.04
and 1.14 0.04 for length, 1.03 0.05 and 1.03 0.07 for width, and
0.88 0.05 and 0.83 0.07 for amplitude, for British Columbia and
Wales plus Cumbria respectively. The condence intervals on amplitude exponents are far from overlapping the others, showing that rate
of change of amplitude with size is lower than that of length and
width, at a high signicance level.
Cirques exhibit static allometry (Evans, 2006b; 2010): the shape of
cirques varies with size. Unfortunately, it is not possible to observe
change over the long periods of time involved in cirque formation. For
rapidly changing bedforms, such as aeolian and uvial dunes, frequently repeated eld survey might test allometric growth directly.
With modern observation techniques dynamic allometry true
allometric growth can be established for mobile bedforms in the
laboratory. Nevertheless the static allometry of scale-specic landforms shows that scaling is compatible with scale-specicity. This
implies that the limits to observed scaling should always be stated;
the existence of limits generates further hypotheses.
7. Hillslopes in uvial basins: what are the landforms?
Scaling over broader ranges is observed in drainage networks.
These have a long history of manual analysis by specic morphometric
methods (Chorley, 1969). Much of this is based on lines and networks
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rather than areas. Channels, oodplains, landslides and fans are easily
delimited and have been studied by specic geomorphometry, but
hillslopes have more often been treated differently. Although
hillslopes or hillsides are generally recognised as landforms, they
have rarely been analysed as areal patches. Rather, they have been
studied as proles (Pitty, 1971; Young, 1972). This may be because in
well-dissected terrain hillslopes cover almost all the landscape; or
because although it is easy to delimit upper and lower boundaries (at
ridges or crests and channels or oodplain margins), lateral boundaries are generally indistinct. Nevertheless, proles can only take us so
far in analysing the 3-dimensional surface and further methods are
needed.
MacMillan and Shary (2009) illustrated ve different classications of form elements (or of local surface shape) based essentially on
plan and prole curvature: for example convex, straight or concave in
plan, and in prole. They pointed out a disadvantage in schemes that
recognise straight in plan: the results depend on whether plan
(contour) curvature or tangential curvature is used. Any of the ve
classications can be applied to any point on the surface, and mapped
automatically: they are properties of the land surface rather than
classes of landform. By tting generalised surfaces, they can be
applied to elementary forms in the sense of Minr and Evans (2008).
Also many landforms can be forced into one or other of these curvature categories, but other properties such as elongation, gradient
and position may be more important in dening landforms. Most
geomorphologists use variables and form classes related to the gravity
eld, but Shary (1995) and Shary et al. (2002, 2005) also recognise a
set of eld-invariant morphometric variables such as unsphericity,
mean curvature, and total Gaussian curvature, and forms such as Cdepressions, dimples in the surface that are open and, thus, do not
accumulate water.
Starting from DEMs, surface-specic points (peaks, passes and
pits) and lines (ridges and channels) can also be dened automatically
at a given scale. Break lines and inections, however, are more useful
in delimiting basic units. These small patches of near-uniform
morphometry are termed elementary forms by Minr and Evans
(2008): see the application by Mentlk et al. (2010). They are basic
geomorphological objects; they cover the whole land surface and each
is united by homogeneity in altitude, slope, curvature or change in
curvature, and bounded by break lines or inections in one or more of
these local surface derivatives. The positions of elementary forms
within the hillslope and drainage basin may then be used to specify
the broader spatial structure, and used as the basis for classication.
Drgu and Blaschke (2006) rst dene forms from homogeneity in
elevation, prole curvature, plan curvature and slope gradient, and
then classify these in terms of slope position. Given ne-resolution
data, such as DEMs with 1 m grid mesh, classication of the whole
surface directly from pixels or grid points is inefcient and potentially
misleading: areal geomorphological objects should be generated rst
(Drgu and Blaschke, 2006; Strobl, 2008).
Denition of elementary forms has as yet been subjective, part of
geomorphological mapping (Mentlk et al., 2010). Theory suggests that
more objective, repeatable denition should be approached from two
directions: the recognition of breaks in slope and curvature to provide
boundaries, and the measurement of internal uniformity. A basic
problem, still to be solved, is the trade-off between the sharpness of a
break, the degree of a change, and the lateral continuity, all of which
make it more useful as a landform or elementary form boundary. Clear
boundaries rarely close completely around a landform so, as in the case
of cirques, compromises must often be made in closing them.
The landscape position of elementary forms can be described as
upper, middle and lower slope or footslope, and terms such as crest/
interuve, buttress/nose, hollow/open depression, hillock and ridge
can be applied (Speight, 1990). Types of elementary form that take
position into account may be termed land elements, after Schmidt and
Hewitt (2004) and Schmidt and Andrew (2005). MacMillan and Shary
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Fig. 6. A difcult terrain for specic geomorphometry: view northwest from Jebel Musa, Sinai, Egypt.
104
(Evans, 1990), even if this means ignoring other aspects of the land
surface. In other words they are more specialised and more in tune
with specic geomorphometry, but at risk of missing interactions
between different geomorphic systems. Some convergence has
occurred, as the legends of comprehensive coloured geomorphological maps have tended to simplify some components, for example in
Dutch (de Graaff et al., 1987) and Italian examples (Pasuto et al.,
2005) which have little chronological or morphometric information. A
Greek view of traditional geomorphological mapping, abundantly
illustrated and with many proposed symbols, is given by Pavlopoulos
et al. (2009). Further simplication may be required to incorporate
maps into GIS (Gustavsson et al., 2006, 2008).
The rationale of putting everything on one map was to permit
visual interrelation of the different components. This was generally
unsuccessful in correlating spatial patterns because of the nonrelevant information interfered; comprehensive maps permitted data
mining by reading off the various attributes of a particular point,
rather than giving a synoptic view of spatial patterns. A successful
multi-layered GIS (Minr et al., 2005; Gustavsson et al., 2008) avoids
these problems by permitting any one layer to be viewed with any
other, and coded subsets of any layer to be used. Together with the use
of simpler, clearer, more specialised maps, this has revived interest
in geomorphological mapping (Paron and Smith, 2008; Pavlopoulos
et al., 2009; Smith et al., in press). Modern computing has also provided many new ways, including animation, of visualising complex
data (Dykes et al., 2005).
The general-purpose geomorphological map may be dead, but long
live geomorphological maps! With the abundance of data now
available, and the range of visualisation techniques, geomorphological
mapping is more important than ever before.
11. Discussion and conclusions
I have attempted to relate geomorphometry to geomorphological
mapping through their common dependence on dening and delimiting landforms and elementary forms. This leads to fuller development of concepts of specic and general geomorphometry. As yet,
both have rarely been applied together and compared in a specic
landscape. Specic geomorphometry is clearly more applicable to
some landscapes than to others, and the number of studies published
reects these differences. Landscapes of bedforms and of distinct
erosional forms lend themselves to specic geomorphometry of areal
forms, whereas analysis of uvial landscapes is more often linearbased: both, of course, should have a vertical dimension. Point-based
analysis seems less applicable, because most features of interest (most
geomorphological objects except for peaks, passes and pits) have
linear or areal extent. (Point pattern analysis has been applied for
example to drumlins, but it is problematic because each drumlin
covers an area that is large relative to the separation of drumlin
centroids.)
Specic morphometry can lead on to various types of generalisation, including scale-specicity and allometry. We are much more
likely to dene types of feature as landforms if they have limited and
characteristic size ranges. Scale specicity relates either to process
thresholds or to the scale of controlling frameworks (e.g. relief of a
whole valley-side, for mass movements) (Evans, 2003; 2010).
Cox (1978) objected to atomistic approaches to subdivision of the
land surface. Cox makes the case that extracting patches from a
continuous surface is unphysical in that the whole surface forms
together (Cox, 2007, and personal communication, 2010), whether
subaerial, subaqueous, supraglacial or subglacial. Diffusive processes
tend to atten the surface, limiting relief and slope gradients and
blurring boundaries. The demand for subdivision of the surface into
manageable objects, however, continues and even grows for
example among soil scientists (MacMillan et al., 2004; Deng, 2007;
and chapters in Hengl and Reuter, 2009). A psychological need to
Acknowledgements
I have drawn on useful discussions with Jozef Minr, Pavel Mentlk
and Lucian Drgu, and with the participants of the excursion Back to
reality Reconciling geomorphometry and geomorphology in the
eld (led by Oliver Korup) from the Geomorphometry 2009
Conference at Zrich, Switzerland. Nick Cox, Nick Odoni, Mike
Smith, Bob MacMillan and an anonymous reviewer generously
provided constructive comments on the submission, and Nick Cox
provided the Dawson, Jeffreys and Quine quotations.
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