THE DISPERSION OF GEOMORPHIC DATA AROUND MEASURES OF CENTRAL TENDENCY AND ITS APPLICATION

Abstract

A voluminous amount of data were gathered from a random sample of over 200 USGS and AMS topographic maps of the United States. As a first step in the analysis of this information, means of several terrain factors were computed. The mean relief of a 5/16 square mile area is 240 feet, and for a 160 square miles area is 1,420 feet. A successive doubling of areas from the smallest of the limits to the largest produces means of relief which fall into a regular progression. This permits the construction of a nomograph for determining the mean relief of areas of any size lying between 5/16 and 160 square miles. Other information of interest computed from these data include an estimate of about 2,300 feet for the average elevation of the United States. A 20 foot contour is crossed on the average of every 290 feet of random traverse. On a similar traverse, 3 ridges averaging 150 feet above valleys would be encountered about every mile. Hilltops rising sufficiently above other land to be represented by a closed contour occur on the average of three every square mile. The above mean values probably seem extreme, but modes and medians have values of a smaller magnitude. The strong skewness of geomorphic data indicated by the spacing between the means and medians calls for a kind of analysis different from that used with normal distributions.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Mar 01, 1957
Accession Number
AD0664166

Entities

People

  • Joan B. Snell
  • Walter F. Wood

Tags

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Continents
  • Data Science
  • Dispersions
  • Elevation
  • Environmental Protection
  • Geographic Regions
  • Information Science
  • Landforms
  • Maps
  • Numbers
  • Standards
  • Statistical Analysis
  • Statistical Distributions
  • Statistical Samples
  • Terrain
  • Topographic Maps
  • United States

Fields of Study

  • Geology

Readers

  • Geodesy
  • Regression Analysis.
  • Riverine Ecology

Technology Areas

  • Space