Geography & Travel

drainage basin

geology
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Also known as: catchment area, catchment basin, watershed
Also called:
catchment area, or (in North America) watershed

drainage basin, area from which all precipitation flows to a single stream or set of streams. For example, the total area drained by the Mississippi River constitutes its drainage basin, whereas that part of the Mississippi River drained by the Ohio River is the Ohio’s drainage basin. The boundary between drainage basins is a drainage divide: all the precipitation on opposite sides of a drainage divide will flow into different drainage basins.

A drainage basin provides a limited surface area within which physical processes pertinent to the general hydrology may be considered. The climatic variables and the water and sediment discharge, water storage, and evapotranspiration may be measured; from these measurements, denudation rates and moisture and energy balances may be derived, each of which is useful in the consideration and understanding of landscape formation.

Lake Ann in North Cascades National Park, Washington
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The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by Adam Augustyn.