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Updated: 2011-11-21 09:42

South Africa 1:500 000 Rivers

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Web Pages relating to the RQS South African 1:500 000 river coverage
Select primary drainage region to download:
from text list
from map
OR download complete file: E00(8Mb) or SHP(6Mb)
OR download E00 file with attribute fields renamed to be compatible with SDE(8Mb)
metadata.xml file (4k)
Download quaternary drainage regions used to allocate reach codes(12Mb!!)
Download table of split river names (50Kb) linked to reachcodes, allowing multilingual labelling. For example, A42E020000,Brak,Spruit.
Download unofficial shapefile of dams (i.e. artificial lakes) (2Mb) at 1:500 000 scale.
The construction of a hydrologically correct, annotated 1:500 000 spatial dataset of the rivers of South Africa and contiguous basins (2006 report, 1Mb).
River coverage project (2003 poster, 1Mb).
River coverage project (1999 report, HTML).
What is the RQS 1:500 000 rivers coverage? :

The coverage is a South African surface drainage network for GIS based on the 1:500 000 rivers coverage from the Chief Directorate of National Geo-spatial Information. This version is made available "as is" for the convenience of those who need a medium-scale river coverage for display or modelling: the developers would welcome any comments relating to errors or areas for improvement. The modifications that we at Resource Quality Services have made are:

  1. Alignment of the arcs to within 50m of the 1:50 000 topographical map coverages
  2. Addition of arcs where required to link with the national monitoring network
  3. Completion of arcs split by dams, lakes and bridges
  4. Direction of rivers downstream
  5. Ordering of streams (Strahler method)
  6. Addition of ESRI's Digital Chart of the World arcs in order to complete the cross-border drainages
  7. Addition or modification of the following fields:
    • NAME: generally, the name assigned to the reach on a topographical map
      • sometimes the correctness is uncertain.
      • ALIAS: alternate name or names for the reach, separated by \.
      • RIVN_ROOT: For multilingual annotation purposes (prototype): the root of the river name.
      • RIVN_SUFX: The qualifier of the river name, e.g. river, spruit, loop.
    • CLASS: unreliable indicator of seasonality of river flow. The classes and allocation require review:
      • Dry=dry river, Perennial=perennial river, Non=non-perennial river,
      • Unknown=not present in original coverage or not transferred from source map.
    • PRIMARY: primary drainage region where the reach occurs.
      • a lower-case letter indicates a pseudo drainage region outside South Africa.
    • ORDER: Strahler order, starting from source=1.
    • END: S=Source, N=iNtermediate, M=Mouth, E=Endorheic.
    • REACHCODE: 10-character reach code made up as follows:
      • 1 to 4: quaternary drainage region in which MOST of the river falls.

      • (Note that some USA programs like BASINS expect eight numerical digits.
        The qat4qat8.txt lookup table contains the correct DWA to USA conversions.)
      • 5 to 6: arbitrary sequence number of the reaches within a quaternary drainage region.
      • 7 to 10: four zeroes (0000) in the 1:500 000 coverage, intended for later use at more detailed scale.
    • SORTER: sorting field - always increases downstream in a river network
    • LENGTH_KM: length of reach in kilometres (not to be confused with the meaningless LENGTH field).
    • RivEX fields: (see http://www.rivex.co.uk/)
      • SHREVE: Shreve order.
      • US_ACCUM: Accumulated upstream metres at the lower node of each arc.
      • CATCHID: Automatically generated ID for each end node (i.e. when END='E' or 'M').
      • DIST2MTH : Distance to the mouth in metres from the upper node of each arc.
      • LINK_TYPE : same idea as the "END" field, above. E=Exterior, I=Interior, O=Outlet.
      • SEGMENT : Channel identifier.
      • CATCHID : drainage region identifier.

Update information
[2010 June release: Fixed errors in D61F07, F30F05, S10B05; E region Ratel given alias Ratels; Fixed uncertain river directions and quaternary drainage edges in D55F, J1, 7 and D54A5, 6.]
[2009 January release: 4 new headwater streams in A31A. Naming of streams in E: Oudste, Noordhoeks, Agterste, Voorste, Boskloof and Krom. In T: Nenga River.]
[2006 December release: Minor changes to the river arcs in B. Major change in L: closure of gap in the Sout River (L11A) near the Skilpadkop River, Gamtoos catchment.]
[2006 August release: Minor changes to the river arcs in B, V, W & X regions. Inclusion of many "trace" .txt files that were previously missing from the web site.]
[2006 March release: No major changes to the river arcs and existing attributes; many minor corrections detected using the fast RivEX extension to ArcGIS 9. RivEX has also enabled the addition of new fields: SHREVE, US_ACCUM, CATCHID and DIST2MTH (see definitions in centre column of this page).]
[2005 July release: Lungile Gaulana has carefully worked through the river coverage during the first part of 2005, mainly checking names (named rivers are up from 6206 to 7568 of about 10000 arcs: 97.8% of a random sample of 1% of all SA arcs had correct naming). We have also used the Shuttle Radar Topography Mission 90-metre cell digital elevation model to try to improve river alignment in Lesotho, where no 1:50 000 rivers are available for comparison. Spatial accuracy has improved, especially in remote parts. Only 1.1% of arcs do not match the 1:50 000 coverage and 4.3% are in areas with no 1:50 000 arcs. The greatest error is in the classification of rivers as perennial and non-perennial: only 83.9% are the same as the 1:50 000 classes.]
[2004 November release: about 12 minor changes to arcs and incorporation of Mozambique data from the Atlas for Data Preparedness and Response in the Limpopo Basin, INGC, University of Eduardo Mondlane, Department of Geography and USAID/ FEWS NET MIND 2003.]
South African spatial data links
The DWA directorate of Spatial and Land Information Management where river data at the 1:50 000 scale may be requested.
Consortium for Estuarine Research and Management (view CERM South African estuaries in Google Earth).
The Chief Directorate of National Geo-spatial Information.
The National Spatial Information Framework.
Other river links
Mandy Uys and Jay O'Keeffe (1997) Simple Words and Fuzzy Zones: Early Directions for Temporary River Research in South Africa Environmental Management 21(4).
WWF Conservation Science Programme's global hydrological database HydroSHEDS.
Atlas of Namibia.
The USGS National Hydrography Dataset.
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