Determining bathymetry of shallow and ephemeral desert lakes using satellite imagery and altimetry

Citation:

M Armon, Dente, E, Shmilovitz, Y, Mushkin, A, Cohen, TJ, Morin, E. , and Enzel, Y. . 2020. “Determining Bathymetry Of Shallow And Ephemeral Desert Lakes Using Satellite Imagery And Altimetry”. Geophysical Research Letters, n/a, n/a, Pp. e2020GL087367. doi:10.1029/2020GL087367.

Abstract:

Abstract Water volume estimates of shallow desert lakes are the basis for water balance calculations, important both for water resource management and paleohydrology/climatology. Water volumes are typically inferred from bathymetry mapping; however, being shallow, ephemeral and remote, bathymetric surveys are scarce in such lakes. We propose a new, remote-sensing based, method to derive the bathymetry of such lakes using the relation between water occurrence, during \textgreater30-yr of optical satellite data, and accurate elevation measurements from the new Ice, Cloud, and Land Elevation Satellite-2 (ICESat-2). We demonstrate our method at three locations where we map bathymetries with \~0.3 m error. This method complements other remotely sensed, bathymetry-mapping methods as it can be applied to: (a) complex lake systems with sub-basins, (b) remote lakes with no in-situ records, and (c) flooded lakes. The proposed method can be easily implemented in other shallow lakes as it builds on publically accessible global data sets.