Spatial-Temporal Evolution Relationship between Water Systems and Historical Settlement Sites Based on Quantitative Analysis: A Case Study of Hankou in Wuhan, China (1635–1949)
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- The GIS platform is used to create a database of historical information for Hankou, Wuhan, to perform spatial analyses on historical geographic information elements, such as buffer analysis and density analysis. The buffer area analysis is used to quantify the distribution of artificial settlement sites within the buffer area of the Hankow water system; the kernel density estimation method is used to study the spatial density distribution of point elements and reveal the distribution characteristics of artificial settlement sites in different periods. The density distribution of line elements is used to reveal the distribution characteristics of street evolution in different periods.
- This paper analyzes and summarizes the coupling relationship between the water system and the sites of artificial settlements at the level of the town, whereas previous studies on the relationship between humans and water have mainly focused on the modern period and the historical changes of a single research object. The results of this research demonstrate how closely related the Hankow people and water are, and have verified the ancient Chinese traditional habitat creation and water management ideas of “harmony between man and nature” and “ the best place to live is close to water conservancy but also avoid flood.”
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Area
2.2. Data Collection
2.3. Methodological Model
- Digitization: the specific content refers to the compilation and collection of historical textual information and historical maps related to the natural ecological space and artificial physical space in the Hankow settlement environment, and the import of this paper-based information into the GIS platform.
- Map visualization and related thematic maps: the specific content refers to importing the information of river systems such as lakes and rivers as natural ecological spaces and artificial settlement sites such as historical buildings, bridges, gates, and roads as artificial physical spaces into the GIS platform. The location analysis maps of the water system, the artificial settlement sites, and the location analysis maps between the water system and the artificial settlement sites are created in accordance with the information related to the water system and the artificial settlement sites that are expressed through GIS visualization.
- Spatial analysis: the specific content refers to studying the information on the river system of natural ecological space and the information of historical sites of artificial material space. The spatial relationship such as the density analysis and buffer analysis of pertinent elements in the urban settlements is studied using the GIS platform, as is the coupling association between the Hankou water system and the artificial settlement sites.
2.3.1. Digitization
2.3.2. Spatial Analysis
Buffer Analysis
Density Analysis
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Map Visualization and Related Thematic Maps
3.2. Spatial Analysis
3.2.1. Buffer Area Analysis
3.2.2. Density Analysis
Kernel Density Analysis
Line Density Analysis
- The density centers of streets in 1915, shown in Figure 17a, were mainly located in Regions , where Regions 1 and 2 were located along Hanjiang River while Regions 3 and 4 were along the Yangtze River.
- The density centers of streets in 1924, shown in Figure 17b, were mainly located in Regions , where Regions 5 and 6 were located along Hanjiang River while Regions were along the Yangtze River.
- The density centers of the streets in 1927, shown in Figure 17c, were mainly located in Regions , where Region 10 and 11 were located along the Hanjiang River while Region 12 and 13 are along the Yangtze River.
- The density centers of the streets in 1932, shown in Figure 17d, were mainly located in Regions , where Region 14 was located along Hanjiang River, Regions 15 and 18 were along the Yangtze River, while Regions 16 and 17 were closer to the inner city water system of this city.
- The density centers of streets in 1938, shown in Figure 17e, were mainly located in Regions , where Regions 19 and 20 were located along Hanjiang River, Regions 22, 23, and 25 were along the Yangtze River, while Regions 21 and 24 were closer to the internal water system of this city.
- The density centers of the streets in 1949, shown in Figure 17f, were mainly located in Regions , where Regions 26 and 27 were along the Hanjiang River, Regions 29 and 32 were along the Yangtze River, Region 28 at the confluence of the Hanjiang River and the Yangtze River, while Region 30 and 31 were closer to the inner water system.
4. Conclusions
- Human activities influence the pattern of the water system. Hankou’s water system changed from having two rivers (the Hanjiang River and the Yangtze River) and their tributary, the Yudai River, in 1635 to having two rivers (the Hanjiang River and the Yangtze River) and their tributary, the North Yudai River, in 1864 to having two rivers (the Hanjiang River and the Yangtze River) and one lake (the Houhu Lake) in 1905 to having two rivers and many lakes in 1949.The evolution of the habitat, which is the urban environment, has been influenced by human management of water.
- The water system has a high degree of coupling with the artificial settlement sites. A coupling relationship between the Hankou water system and the artificial settlement sites is discovered after coupling research was carried out in both the temporal and spatial dimensions.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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No. | Map Names | Time Base | Elements to Be Extracted | Image Source |
---|---|---|---|---|
a | The View of Jianghan | Around the middle of the 17th century | “Wuhan Historical Atlas”, Library of Wuhan MuseumTitle, Title: The View of Jianghan (silk) | |
b | The Map of Wuchang Riverbank | Around the middle of the 17th century | “Wuhan Historical Atlas” | |
c | Relief Map of the Three Towns of Wuhan | 1748 | “Wuhan Historical Atlas” | |
d | Wuhan City Map (Hankou) | 1864 | Buildings, bridges, gates, water systems | (Qing) Hubei Official Book Bureau, Library of Congress Collection |
e | Hankou Street Map of the Continuing Hanyang County | 1868 | Buildings, bridges, gates, water systems | “Sequel to Hankou Street Map (Hankou)”, Volume 1, Public Opinion Map |
f | Hankou Town Street Map of Hubei | 1877 | Buildings, bridges, gates, water systems | Hubei Clan Publication |
g | Plan of Hankow | 1909 | Buildings | (In the first year of the Xuantong period of the Qing Dynasty) Hankow Daily News overprint |
h | Hankow with Hanyang and wuchang | 1915 | Street, water system | An Official Guide to Eastern Asia, Volume IV China. published by The Imperial Japanese Government Railways. Tokyo |
i | Hankow Hanyang and Wuchang | 1917 | Street, water system | Hubei Clan Publication |
j | Map of Three Towns in Wuhan | 1918 | Street, water system | “The Complete History of the Province of China”, Volume IX with maps |
k | Hankow with Hanyang and Wuchang | 1924 | Street, water system | “Wuhan Historical Atlas” |
l | Hankow | 1927 | Street, water system | U.S. Army Map Service |
m | Wuhan City Street Map | 1932 | Street, water system | Wuchang Yaxin Geoscience Society |
n | The latest detailed street map of Wuhan city | 1938 | Street, water system | “Wuhan Historical Atlas” |
o | Detailed street map of New Wuhan City | 1949 | Street, water system | Wuchang Yaxin Geosciences Society |
Name | Shape Elements | Date of Construction | Events |
---|---|---|---|
Names of the artificial settlement sites as recorded in the historic map (e.g., Shan-Shaan Association Hall) | Point shape | Building dates recorded in the relevant historical documents (the Kangxi era of the Qing dynasty) | Building dates and historical events recorded in the relevant documents (built during the Kangxi period and destroyed in the 1854 uprising in the fourth year of the Xianfeng period) |
Names of the streets on the map (e.g., Zhongshan Street) | Line shape | Building dates recorded in the relevant historical documents (1907) | Building dates and historical events recorded in the relevant documents (Hankow Fort was demolished in 1907, and the wall base was converted into the Back City Road, now known as Zhongshan Avenue) |
Names of the water systems on the maps (e.g., the Yangtze River and the Hanjiang River) | Plane element | Birthdates in the relevant historical records | Water system changes or events recorded in the relevant historical documents |
No. | Object | h | n | Output Pixel Size |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1635–1864 | 51.14 | 107 | 6.13 |
2 | 1864–1905 | 51.14 | 195 | 6.13 |
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Zou, H.; Chen, C.; Xiao, W.; Shi, L. Spatial-Temporal Evolution Relationship between Water Systems and Historical Settlement Sites Based on Quantitative Analysis: A Case Study of Hankou in Wuhan, China (1635–1949). Sustainability 2022, 14, 14614. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142114614
Zou H, Chen C, Xiao W, Shi L. Spatial-Temporal Evolution Relationship between Water Systems and Historical Settlement Sites Based on Quantitative Analysis: A Case Study of Hankou in Wuhan, China (1635–1949). Sustainability. 2022; 14(21):14614. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142114614
Chicago/Turabian StyleZou, Han, Chen Chen, Wei Xiao, and Lifu Shi. 2022. "Spatial-Temporal Evolution Relationship between Water Systems and Historical Settlement Sites Based on Quantitative Analysis: A Case Study of Hankou in Wuhan, China (1635–1949)" Sustainability 14, no. 21: 14614. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142114614