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Apr 15, 2015 · Robert E. Horton coined these four laws: the law of stream numbers, the law of stream lengths, the limits of infiltration capacity, and the runoff-detention-storage relation. What are they specifically?
Horten is a full-service law firm with more than 70 years of experience and 350 specialists, all willing to take on new challenges, explore risks and identify opportunities with our clients.
Horten is a full-service law firm with more than 65 years of experience and 350 specialists, all willing to take on new challenges, explore risks and identify opportunities with our clients.
Horton (1945) originally developed the notion of stream orders. First-order streams are those which have no tributaries, second-order streams are those which receive as tributaries only streams of the first order, etc.
horton’s law of stream numbers (1940’s) The numbers of streams of successively lower orders in a given basin tend to form a geometric progression, beginning with a single trunk segment of the highest order, and increasing according to a constant bifurcation* ratio.
Horton's law of stream lengths suggested that a geometric relationship existed between the number of stream segments in successive stream orders. The law of basin areas indicated that the mean basin area of successive ordered streams formed a linear relationship when graphed.