Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

The concept of entropy in landscape evolution

January 1, 1962

The concept of entropy is expressed in terms of probability of various states. Entropy treats of the distribution of energy. The principle is introduced that the most probable condition exists when energy in a river system is as uniformly distributed as may be permitted by physical constraints. From these general considerations equations for the longitudinal profiles of rivers are derived that are mathematically comparable to those observed in the field. The most probable river profiles approach the condition in which the downstream rate of production of entropy per unit mass is constant.

Hydraulic equations are insufficient to determine the velocity, depths, and slopes of rivers that are themselves authors of their own hydraulic geometries. A solution becomes possible by introducing the concept that the distribution of energy tends toward the most probable. This solution leads to a theoretical definition of the hydraulic geometry of river channels that agrees closely with field observations.

The most probable state for certain physical systems can also be illustrated by random-walk models. Average longitudinal profiles and drainage networks were so derived and these have the properties implied by the theory. The drainage networks derived from random walks have some of the principal properties demonstrated by the Horton analysis; specifically, the logarithms of stream length and stream numbers are proportional to stream order.

Publication Year 1962
Title The concept of entropy in landscape evolution
DOI 10.3133/pp500A
Authors Luna Bergere Leopold, Walter Basil Langbein
Publication Type Report
Publication Subtype USGS Numbered Series
Series Title Professional Paper
Series Number 500
Index ID pp500A
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse