Here are a few other tips that might work: - Look for things like locks, spillways, bridges, etc. that would cause whitewater and use that to determine flow direction - Rivers and streams tend to flow toward larger waterbodies, such as lakes, gulfs and oceans. Look for things likes deltas to help determine flow direction - Also, they tend to converge with other rivers & streams downstream. Look for the Y's where two rivers converge, with the being toward the base of the Y - Rivers and streams tend to be wider downstream. - Because of above, larger navigational vessels tend to be found downstream - Because of the above, larger settlements tend to be found downstream.
Of course, these are general rules of thumb and there are exceptions. For example, a river might widen into a lake and then have a narrow stream flowing from the lake. Likewise, dredging may artificially widen a river segment between two industrial centers. Still, I think these rules along with Blake's tips should get you most of the way there. Hope it helps!!! Ezra On Tue, Apr 5, 2016 at 1:23 PM, Mike Thompson <miketh...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > On Tue, Apr 5, 2016 at 12:11 PM, Blake Girardot <bgirar...@gmail.com> > wrote: > >> seeing the area might help a bit to see if anyone has any tips. > > The general area is that which is around this node: > https://www.openstreetmap.org/node/4100183177 (note I have already mapped > the waterway which that node is part of using JOSM and OCM) > > >> >> whitewater points in the direction of flow, meaning it trails after the >> obstruction in the waterway. >> > Good tip! I hadn't thought of that.. In this case these appear to be > intermittent waterways (albeit rather wide), and there is very little water > shown in the Bing imagery, let alone whitewater. > >> >> you can also put the opencyclemap url into the custom background in iD, >> the url is: >> http://tile.opencyclemap.org/cycle/{zoom}/{x}/{y}.png > > I was trying to keep this simple, but this might be the way to go. > >> >> > _______________________________________________ > HOT mailing list > HOT@openstreetmap.org > https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/hot > > -- Ezra Boyd, PhD DisasterMap.net, LLC <http://DisasterMap.net> ezgis <ezgi...@gmail.com>7...@gmail.com <ezgi...@gmail.com> (504)533-4447
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