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hydrologie

Hydrologie, or hydrology, is the science that studies the distribution and movement of Earth's water. It analyzes the occurrence of water in the atmosphere, on the surface, in soils and rocks, and how water interacts with living organisms and human activities. The discipline draws on physics, chemistry, geology, and geography to describe patterns and processes.

The hydrologic cycle encompasses precipitation, evaporation and transpiration, infiltration and percolation, runoff, and the storage and

Data and methods rely on field observations (rain gauges, stream gauges, groundwater wells), remote sensing, and

Applications cover water resources management, flood forecasting and risk assessment, drought monitoring, irrigation planning, hydropower, ecological

movement
of
water
in
soils,
rivers,
lakes,
and
aquifers.
Hydrology
distinguishes
surface-water
hydrology,
which
focuses
on
rivers,
lakes,
wetlands,
and
floods,
from
groundwater
hydrology,
which
studies
aquifers
and
subsurface
flow.
Hydrometeorology
links
weather
and
water,
emphasizing
how
atmospheric
processes
influence
water
supply
and
hazards.
hydrological
modeling.
A
central
concept
is
the
water
budget:
precipitation
minus
evapotranspiration
minus
runoff
plus
changes
in
storage
equals
zero.
More
detailed
budgets
may
include
groundwater
storage
changes.
Hydrological
models
range
from
simple
empirical
rainfall–runoff
models
to
complex
distributed
physically
based
models,
often
integrated
with
geographic
information
systems
and
data
assimilation.
flow
assessment,
urban
drainage,
and
climate-change
impact
analysis.
Subfields
include
hydrogeology,
surface-water
hydrology,
ecohydrology,
and
hydroinformatics,
each
addressing
different
aspects
of
water
movement,
quality,
and
its
ties
to
ecosystems.
The
field
has
historical
roots
in
systematic
rainfall
and
discharge
measurements
and
the
development
of
groundwater
hydraulics,
notably
Darcy’s
law,
with
formal
hydrology
maturing
in
the
19th
and
20th
centuries.