The Hydrology of Floods
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Providing
Hydrologic Science and Data to Water-Resource Managers and the
General Public |
The following questions
and answers provide background on some of the scientific issues regarding
floods. For questions on regulatory issues, such as flood-plain restrictions
in states and localities, please refer to the appropriate authority
in your jurisdiction. For information on flood prevention, flood management,
or disaster relief, you should refer to the Federal Emergency Management
Agency (FEMA) at http://www.fema.gov/
or to your local emergency management agency.
Questions and answers
are original compositions or are compiled from any available sources
and credit is given where appropriate. New material will be added as
needed. Contributions are welcome.
Contents
Weather
and Floods
What causes floods?
The Statistics
and Measurement of Floods
What is a recurrence
interval?
Does a 100-year
storm always cause a 100-year flood?
Can two "100-year
floods" occur within several years or even within the same year?
How can the same
streamflow be a 100-year flood in one location and only a 50-year flood
at another?
How is peak flow
determined?
Weather
and Floods
What causes floods?
Flooding occurs
in known floodplains when prolonged rainfall over several days, intense
rainfall over a short period of time, or an ice or debris jam causes
a river or stream to overflow and flood the surrounding area. Melting
snow can combine with rain in the winter and early spring; severe thunderstorms
can bring heavy rain in the spring and summer; or tropical cyclones
can bring intense rainfall to the coastal and inland states in the summer
and fall.
Flash floods occur
within six hours of a rain event, or after a dam or levee failure, or
following a sudden release of water held by an ice or debris jam, and
flash floods can catch people unprepared. You will not always have a
warning that these deadly, sudden floods are coming. So if you live
in areas prone to flash floods, plan now to protect your family and
property.
As land is converted
from fields or woodlands to roads and parking lots, it loses its ability
to absorb rainfall. Urbanization increases runoff two to six times over
what would occur on natural terrain. During periods of urban flooding,
streets can become swift moving rivers, while basements and viaducts
can become death traps as they fill with water.
Several factors
contribute to flooding. Two key elements are rainfall intensity and
duration. Intensity is the rate of rainfall, and duration is how long
the rain lasts. Topography, soil conditions, and ground cover also play
important roles. Most flash flooding is caused by slow-moving thunderstorms,
thunderstorms repeatedly moving over the same area, or heavy rains from
hurricanes and tropical storms. Floods, on the other hand, can be slow-
or fast-rising, but generally develop over a period of hours or days.
Learn about flooding
and flash flooding in your area by contacting the local emergency management
office, National Weather Service (NWS) office, your American Red Cross
chapter, or your planning and zoning department. If you are at risk,
take steps to reduce damage and the risk of injury or loss to your family.
Reference: National
Disaster Education Coalition, 1999
The Statistics and Measurement of Floods
What is a recurrence
interval?
Statistical techniques,
through a process called frequency analysis, are used to estimate the
probability of the occurrence of a given event. The recurrence interval
(sometimes called the return period) is based on the probability that
the given event will be equalled or exceeded in any given year. For
example, there may be a 1 in 50 chance that 6.60 inches of rain will
fall in a county in a 24-hour period during any given year. Thus, the
rainfall total of 6.60 inches in a consecutive 24-hour period is said
to have a 50-year recurrence interval. Likewise, using a frequency analysis
(Interagency Advisory Committee on Water Data, 1982) there may be a
1 in 100 chance that a streamflow of 15,000 cubic feet per second (ft3/s)
will occur during any year in a particular stream. Thus, the peak flow
of 15,000 ft3/s is said to have a 100-year recurrence interval.
Rainfall recurrence intervals are based on both the magnitude and the
duration of a rainfall event, whereas streamflow recurrence intervals
are based solely on the magnitude of the annual peak flow.
Ten or more years
of data are required to perform a frequency analysis for the determination
of recurrence intervals. More confidence can be placed in the results
of a frequency analysis based on, for example, 30 years of record than
on an analysis based on 10 years of record.
Many rainfall recurrence
intervals used in hydrologic analysis were developed almost 40 years
ago (Hershfield, 1961). These recurrence intervals may become better
defined as more recent local data become available for analysis.
Recurrence intervals
for the annual peak streamflow at a given location change if there are
significant changes in the flow patterns at that location, possibly
caused by an impoundment or diversion of flow. The effects of development
(conversion of land from forested or agricultural uses to commercial,
residential, or industrial uses) on peak flows is generally much greater
for low-recurrence interval floods than for high-recurrence interval
floods, such as 25-, 50-, or 100-year floods. During these larger floods,
the soil is saturated and does not have the capacity to absorb additional
rainfall. Under these conditions, essentially all of the rain that falls,
whether on paved surfaces or on saturated soil, runs off and becomes
streamflow.
Modified from
Robinson, Hazell, and Young, 1998
Does a 100-year
storm always cause a 100-year flood?
No. Several factors
can independently influence the cause-and-effect relation between rainfall
and streamflow.
When rainfall data
are collected at a point within a stream basin, it is highly unlikely
that this same amount of rainfall occurred uniformly throughout the
entire basin. During intensely localized storms, rainfall amounts throughout
the basin can differ greatly from the rainfall amount measured at the
location of the raingage. Some parts of the basin may even remain dry,
supplying no additional runoff to the streamflow and lessening the impact
of the storm. Consequently, only part of the basin may experience a
100-year rainfall event.
Existing conditions
prior to the storm can influence the amount of stormwater runoff into
the stream system. Dry soil allows greater infiltration of rainfall
and reduces the amount of runoff entering the stream. Conversely, soil
that is already wet from previous rains has a lower capacity for infiltration,
allowing more runoff to enter the stream.
Another factor to
consider is the relation between the duration of the storm and the size
of the stream basin in which the storm occurs. For example, a 100-year
storm of 30-minutes duration in a 1-square-mile (mi2) basin
will have a more significant effect on streamflow than the same storm
in a 50-mi2 basin. Generally, streams with larger drainage
areas require storms of longer duration for a significant increase in
streamflow to occur. These and other factors determine whether or not
a 100-year storm will produce a 100-year flood.
Modified from
Robinson, Hazell, and Young, 1998
Can two "100-year
floods" occur within several years or even within the same year?
This question points
out the importance of proper terminology. The term "100-year flood"
is used in an attempt to simplify the definition of a flood that statistically
has a 1-percent chance of occurring in any given year. Likewise, the
term "100-year storm" is used to define a rainfall event that
statistically has this same 1-percent chance of occurring. In other
words, over the course of 1 million years, these events would be expected
to occur 10,000 times.These events, as well as any recurring events,
are assumed to be statistically independent of each other.
Therefore, each
year begins with the same 1-percent chance that a 100-year event will
occur.
| Recurrence interval, in years |
Probability of occurrence in any
given year |
Percent chance of occurrence in
any given year |
| |
| 1 in 500 |
| 1 in 100 |
| 1 in 50 |
| 1 in 25 |
| 1 in 10 |
| 1 in 5 |
| 1 in 2 |
|
|
Modified from
Robinson, Hazell, and Young, 1998
How can the same
streamflow be a 100-year flood in one location and only a 50-year flood
at another?
Recurrence intervals
are based on the probability of the peak streamflow occurring at a given
location in any year. As water flows downstream from point "A"
to point "B" and the drainage area increases, the volume of
streamflow increases. Given this, it may seem reasonable to think that
peak flows would increase in the same manner, but this is not necessarily
true. The flow at any particular point on a stream depends on local
stream channel and floodplain conditions as well as on conditions upstream
or downstream of the point, such as channel slope, floodplain shape,
and any impoundments of streamflow.
Downstream points
on a stream will have always have greater total volume of streamflow
resulting from flooding (except in certain very unique situations),
but the rate of streamflow can be quite different from upstream points,
and will often be less. In these cases, streamflow will remain elevated
for a longer period of time. This phenomenon, known as peak attenuation,
can be attributed to several variables. A narrow, efficient stream channel
will allow the water to pass quickly, resulting in a nearly instantaneous
increase in peak flow. At locations where the stream channel widens
or may contain heavy vegetation, the water velocity may decrease. Also,
as the peak flow moves downstream, water may move into the floodplain
where it is stored until the water level begins to recede. As the water
level recedes, the stored water in the floodplain will slowly re-enter
the stream. These combined factors explain why the peak flow may be
less in magnitude but longer in duration as the flood progresses downstream.
Modified from
Robinson, Hazell, and Young, 1998
How is peak flow
determined?
Stream stage (or
water level) and streamflow (or discharge) are measured at locations
called streamflow gaging stations. Stage is measured and recorded continuously
by electronic instruments to an accuracy of 0.01 foot. Stage information
from many streamflow gaging stations is transmitted several times per
day by satellite or telephone telemetry to USGS computers.
Flow is more difficult
to measure accurately and continuously than is stage. Discharge for
a gaging station is typically determined from an established stage-discharge
relation, or rating curve. Individual discharge measurements are made
by USGS personnel at a gaging station by using standard procedures (Rantz
and others, 1982); ideally, these measurements are made when the stage
is not changing. A series of these measurements made over a range of
flow conditions defines the rating curve, which is used to convert continuous
measurements of stage to a continuous record of discharge. Channel changes,
resulting from scour, deposition, vegetation, or other processes, alter
the stage-discharge relation, so that discharge measurements must be
made routinely and continuously to ensure that the rating curve remains
accurate.
A rating curve is
considered accurate only over the range for which discharge measurements
have been made. Discharge measurements sometimes are not available for
the full range of flows at gaging stations that have been in operation
for only a few years. Even at gaging stations that have been in continuous
operation for 30 years or more, direct discharge measurements for extremely
high flows are difficult to obtain because (1) these events are rare,
(2) debris often accumulates in the channel, (3) extreme peak flows
may persist for only a short period of time, and (4) measurement sites
are often inaccessible due to road or bridge closures.
Estimates of peak
flows, which are outside the range of the established rating curve,
may be made by an extrapolation of the rating curve to the peak stage.
At some gaging stations, indirect methods of discharge determination
based on high-water marks, channel properties, and hydraulic principles
may be used to obtain an independent estimate of discharge. These indirect
methods generally require accurate field surveys to determine high-water
marks, channel properties, and channel shape. The information obtained
in the field is then processed using computer programs to determine
the discharge. Continued evaluation of these discharge computations
may result in some revision of previously determined peak flows.
Modified from
Robinson, Hazell, and Young, 1998