Canadian Hydrospatial Network - CHN

Canadian Hydrospatial Network - CHN The Canadian Hydrospatial Network (CHN) is an analysis-ready geospatial network of features that help enable the modelling of surface water flow in Canada. The six main layers and feature types are: flowlines, waterbodies, catchments, catchment aggregates, work units, and hydro nodes. Where possible the CHN is derived from high resolution source data such as Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR) derived Digital Elevation Models (DEMs) and aerial imagery, to name a few. If existing provincial or territorial hydrographic networks meet the standards, they are incorporated into the CHN, otherwise automatic extraction methods are used on the high-resolution source data. To provide full network connectivity, if neither of these methods is possible in a region, the NHN is converted into the CHN until higher-resolution source data is available. Additional value-added attributes are included in the CHN to aid modelling, such as stream order and reach slope. The CHN physical model and features are also closely aligned and harmonized with the USGS 3DHP hydrographic network, which aids trans-border modelling. Where possible geonames (i.e. toponyms) are also added. The CHN is produced and disseminated by hydrologically connected geographic areas called work units. Work units can contain just one watershed, several small adjacent watersheds outletting into a large body of water, or be one of many parts of a larger watershed. In all cases, the features of a work unit are hydrologically connected. This is a more natural approach to data delivery, in comparison to data that is split into tiles. A generalized work unit index file is provided in the downloads to help users decide which files to download. For more information on the CHN please visit the project webpage: https://natural-resources.canada.ca/canadian-hydrospatial-network 2024-05-15 Natural Resources Canada geoinfo@nrcan-rncan.gc.ca Form DescriptorsNature and EnvironmentScience and TechnologyCHNHydrospatialGeospatialGeoBaseHydrographic NetworkRHCWaterNetworksSurface waterRiversLakesStreamsWatercoursesWatershedsHydrographyHydrologyNatural resourcesEarth sciencesGeographyGeographic data Web Service (english) - CHN - Canadian Hydrospatial NetworkESRI REST https://maps-cartes.services.geo.ca/server_serveur/rest/services/NRCan/chn_en/MapServer Web Service (french) - CHN - Canadian Hydrospatial NetworkESRI REST https://maps-cartes.services.geo.ca/server_serveur/rest/services/NRCan/chn_fr/MapServer Vector Datasets (bilingual) - CHN - Canadian Hydrospatial NetworkGPKG https://ftp.maps.canada.ca/pub/nrcan_rncan/vector/chn_rhc/workunit_unitetravail/ Documentation (english and french) - CHN - Canadian Hydrospatial NetworkPDF https://ftp.maps.canada.ca/pub/nrcan_rncan/vector/chn_rhc/doc/

The Canadian Hydrospatial Network (CHN) is an analysis-ready geospatial network of features that help enable the modelling of surface water flow in Canada. The six main layers and feature types are: flowlines, waterbodies, catchments, catchment aggregates, work units, and hydro nodes.

Where possible the CHN is derived from high resolution source data such as Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR) derived Digital Elevation Models (DEMs) and aerial imagery, to name a few. If existing provincial or territorial hydrographic networks meet the standards, they are incorporated into the CHN, otherwise automatic extraction methods are used on the high-resolution source data. To provide full network connectivity, if neither of these methods is possible in a region, the NHN is converted into the CHN until higher-resolution source data is available.

Additional value-added attributes are included in the CHN to aid modelling, such as stream order and reach slope. The CHN physical model and features are also closely aligned and harmonized with the USGS 3DHP hydrographic network, which aids trans-border modelling. Where possible geonames (i.e. toponyms) are also added.

The CHN is produced and disseminated by hydrologically connected geographic areas called work units. Work units can contain just one watershed, several small adjacent watersheds outletting into a large body of water, or be one of many parts of a larger watershed. In all cases, the features of a work unit are hydrologically connected. This is a more natural approach to data delivery, in comparison to data that is split into tiles. A generalized work unit index file is provided in the downloads to help users decide which files to download.

For more information on the CHN please visit the project webpage:

https://natural-resources.canada.ca/canadian-hydrospatial-network

Data and Resources

Contact Information

Country: Canada

Electronic Mail Address: geoinfo@nrcan-rncan.gc.ca

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