Alexander Ilich February 21, 2023

# MultiscaleDTM

Ilich, Alexander R.; Misiuk, Benjamin; Lecours, Vincent; Murawski, Steven A.; 2021. “MultiscaleDTM”, https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5548338. https://github.com/ailich/MultiscaleDTM.

## Purpose

This package calculates multi-scale geomorphometric terrain attributes from regularly gridded digital terrain models (DTM; i.e. elevation or bathymetry rasters) via a specified window size.

Figure adapted from Wilson et al. (2007)

The package can be installed from CRAN using install.packages("MultiscaleDTM") or the development version can be installed from github using the code remotes::install_github("ailich/MultiscaleDTM"). If you are using Windows, you may need to install Rtools using the instructions found here). To install from github you must already have the remotes package installed, which can be installed using install.packages("remotes")

This package relies on the terra package for handling of spatial raster data.

## Main Functions

### Slope, Aspect and Curvature

• SlpAsp calculates multi-scale slope and aspect according to Misiuk et al (2021) which is a modification of the traditional 3 x 3 slope and aspect algorithms (Fleming and Hoffer, 1979; Horn et al., 1981; Ritter, 1987). This algorithm only considers a subset of cells within the focal window, specifically the four cells on the edge of the focal window directly up, down, left, and right of the focal cell for the “rook” case and an additional four corner cells for the “queen” case.

• Qfit calculates slope, aspect, curvature, and morphometric features by fitting a quadratic surface to the focal window using ordinary least squares using the equation shown below where a-f are regression parameters, Z is the elevation/depth, X is the east/west coordinates in the focal window relative to the focal cell, and Y is the north/south coordinates in the focal window relative to the focal cell (Evans, 1980; Wilson et al., 2007; Wood, 1996). The morphometric features algorithm has been modified to use more robust measures of curvature based on the suggestions of Minár et al. (2020).

$Z = aX^2 + bY^2 +cXY+ dX +eY +f$

Figure adapted from Walbridge et al., (2018)

### Roughness

• VRM - Vector ruggedness measure (Sappington et al. 2007) quantifies roughness by measuring the dispersion of vectors normal to the terrain surface. This is accomplished by calculating the local (3 x 3 cell) slope and aspect, and constructing unit vectors normal to each cell in the DTM. These unit vectors are then decomposed into their corresponding x, y, and z components (i.e. the x, y, and z coordinates of the head of the vector relative to its origin) and used in the following equation (note: N is the number of cells in the window). VRM ranges from zero to one, representing completely smooth to rough surfaces, respectively. .

Figure adapted from Sappington et al. (2007)

$\text{VRM} = 1- \frac{\sqrt{\bigg(\sum x\bigg)^2+\bigg(\sum y\bigg)^2+\bigg(\sum z\bigg)^2}}{N}$

$x = sin(\text{slope})*sin(\text{aspect})$

$y=sin(\text{slope})*cos(\text{aspect})$

$z=cos(\text{slope})$

• SAPA - Calculates the Surface Area to Planar Area (Jenness, 2004). Rougher surfaces will have a greater surface area to planar area ratio, and perfectly smooth surfaces will have a value of 1. This is a 3D analog to the classical “chain-and-tape” method, which calculates roughness as the ratio of the contoured distance (chain length) and linear distance (tape measure distance; Risk, 1972). Additionally, planar area can be corrected for slope by dividing the product of the x and y resolution by the cosine of slope (Du Preez 2015). Moreover, a proposed extension to multiple scales is provided by summing the surface areas within the focal window and adjusting the planar area of the focal window using multi-scale slope.

• SurfaceArea - Calculate the surface area of each grid cell (Jenness, 2004). This is accomplished by connecting a focal cell to its immediate neighbors to create 8 large triangles. These large triangles are then trimmed back to the extent of the focal cell using the principle of similar triangles, and then the area of those 8 smaller triangles are calculated and summed to estimate the surface area of the focal pixel. This is used within SAPA.

Figure adapted from Friedman et al. (2012) and created with BioRender.com.

• AdjSD- This new proposed roughness metric modifies the standard deviation of elevation/bathymetry to account for slope. It does this by first fitting a plane to the data in the focal window using ordinary least squares, and then extracting the residuals, and then calculating the standard deviation of the residuals within the focal window.

• RIE - Calculates the Roughness Index-Elevation which quantifies the standard deviation of residual topography (Cavalli et al., 2008). This measure is conceptually similar to AdjSD but rather than fitting a plane and extracting residuals for the entire focal window, residual topography is calculated as the focal pixel minus the focal mean. Then the local standard deviation is calculated from this residual topography using a focal filter.

Figure adapted from Cavalli et al. (2008)

### Relative Position

Relative position represents whether an area is a local high or low, and is calculated as the value of the focal cell minus the value of the mean of included values in the focal window. Positive values indicate local topographic highs and negative values indicate lows.Relative Position can be expressed in units of the input DTM raster or can standardized relative to the local topography by dividing by the standard deviation or range of included elevation values in the focal window.

• RelPos - A flexible and general purpose function to calculate relative position using a rectangular, circular, annulus, or custom shaped focal window. All other relative position functions are calls to RelPos with different default parameter values.

• TPI - Topographic Position Index (Weiss, 2001) is the difference between the value of a focal cell and the mean of the surrounding cells (i.e. the central cell is excluded from focal opertaions) within a rectangular or circular focal window.

• DMV - Difference from Mean Value (Lecours et al., 2017; Wilson, and Gallant, 2000) is the difference between the value of a focal cell and the mean of all cells (i.e. including the focal cell) in a rectangular or circular focal window.

• BPI - Bathymetric Position Index (Lundblad et al., 2006) is the difference between the value of a focal cell and the mean of the surrounding cells contained within an annulus shaped window. Since an annulus shaped window is used, it requires an inner and outer radius to be specified. Although the name contains “bathymetric,” that is due to the context in which it was proposed, and is equally applicable to terrestrial elevation data.

Examples of different focal window shapes. Shown are a 13 x 13 cell rectangular window (left), a circular window with a radius of six cells (center), and an annulus window with an inner radius of four cells and an outer radius of six cells (right).

## Tutorial

In this tutorial we will calculate various terrain attributes using a 5 x 5 cell rectangular window. Any rectangular odd numbered window size however could be used (see figure directly below). Window sizes are specified with a vector of length 2 of c(n_rows, n_cols). If a single number is provided it will be used for both the number of rows and columns. The only metric that does not follow this syntax is BPI which uses an annulus shaped focal window which we will calculate using an inner radius of 4 and an outer radius of 6 cells.

library(MultiscaleDTM) #Load MultiscaleDTM package

See package help page

help(package="MultiscaleDTM")

r<- rast(volcano, extent= ext(2667400, 2667400 + ncol(volcano)*10, 6478700, 6478700 + nrow(volcano)*10), crs = "EPSG:27200")

### Slope, Aspect, and Curvature

slp_asp<- SlpAsp(r = r, w = c(5,5), unit = "degrees", method = "queen", metrics = c("slope", "aspect", "eastness", "northness"))

qmetrics<- Qfit(r, w = c(5,5), unit = "degrees", metrics = c("elev", "qslope", "qaspect", "qeastness", "qnorthness", "profc", "planc", "twistc", "meanc", "maxc", "minc", "features"), na.rm = TRUE)

To explore these measures in an interactive environment use explore_terrain() or go to this website

### Roughness

vrm<- VRM(r, w=c(5,5), na.rm = TRUE)

Note: multi-scale SAPA is experimental. The established metric by De Preez (2015) would use w=1.

sapa<- SAPA(r, w=c(5,5), slope_correction = TRUE)

adj_SD<- AdjSD(r, w=c(5,5), na.rm = TRUE)

rie<- RIE(r, w=c(5,5), na.rm = TRUE)

### Relative Position

rp<- RelPos(r, w=matrix(data = c(1,NA,1), nrow = 3, ncol=3), shape = "custom", na.rm = TRUE)

tpi<- TPI(r, w=c(5,5), shape= "rectangle", na.rm = TRUE)

dmv<- DMV(r, w=5, shape= "circle", na.rm = TRUE, stand="range")

bpi<- BPI(r, w = c(4,6), unit = "cell", stand= "sd", na.rm = TRUE)

Circle and annulus windows for can be specified in either cell units (number of raster cells) or in map units (e.g. meters) which can be useful if your x and y resolutions are not equal. Additionally, the function circle_window and annulus_window can be used to verify that you are specifying your window correctly (NA’s are excluded cells and 1’s are included cells) and can be directly supplied to the w argument instead.

annulus_window(radius = c(4,6), unit = "cell")
##       [,1] [,2] [,3] [,4] [,5] [,6] [,7] [,8] [,9] [,10] [,11] [,12] [,13]
##  [1,]   NA   NA   NA   NA   NA   NA    1   NA   NA    NA    NA    NA    NA
##  [2,]   NA   NA   NA    1    1    1    1    1    1     1    NA    NA    NA
##  [3,]   NA   NA    1    1    1    1    1    1    1     1     1    NA    NA
##  [4,]   NA    1    1    1   NA   NA   NA   NA   NA     1     1     1    NA
##  [5,]   NA    1    1   NA   NA   NA   NA   NA   NA    NA     1     1    NA
##  [6,]   NA    1    1   NA   NA   NA   NA   NA   NA    NA     1     1    NA
##  [7,]    1    1    1   NA   NA   NA   NA   NA   NA    NA     1     1     1
##  [8,]   NA    1    1   NA   NA   NA   NA   NA   NA    NA     1     1    NA
##  [9,]   NA    1    1   NA   NA   NA   NA   NA   NA    NA     1     1    NA
## [10,]   NA    1    1    1   NA   NA   NA   NA   NA     1     1     1    NA
## [11,]   NA   NA    1    1    1    1    1    1    1     1     1    NA    NA
## [12,]   NA   NA   NA    1    1    1    1    1    1     1    NA    NA    NA
## [13,]   NA   NA   NA   NA   NA   NA    1   NA   NA    NA    NA    NA    NA
## attr(,"unit")
## [1] "cell"
## attr(,"scale")
## [1] "4x6"
## attr(,"shape")
## [1] "annulus"
bpi2<- BPI(r, w = annulus_window(radius = c(4,6), unit = "cell"), stand= "sd", na.rm = TRUE) # equivalent to BPI code from earlier

# References

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Wood, J., 1996. The geomorphological characterisation of digital elevation models (Ph.D.). University of Leicester.