Litcius/Paper detail

The Effect of Storm Direction on Flood Frequency Analysis

Gabriel Pérez, J. D. Gomez‐Velez, Ricardo Mantilla, Daniel B. Wright, Z. Li

2021Geophysical Research Letters17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Storm direction modulates a hydrograph's magnitude and duration, thus having a potentially large effect on local flood risk. However, how changes in the preferential storm direction affect the probability distribution of peak flows remains unknown. We address this question with a novel Monte Carlo approach where stochastically transposed storms drive hydrologic simulations over medium and mesoscale watersheds in the Midwestern United States. Systematic rotations of these watersheds are used to emulate changes in the preferential storm direction. We found that the peak flow distribution impacts are scale‐dependent, with larger changes observed in the mesoscale watershed than in the medium‐scale watershed. We attribute this to the high diversity of storm patterns and the storms' scale relative to watershed size. This study highlights the potential of the proposed stochastic framework to address fundamental questions about hydrologic extremes when our ability to observe these events in nature is hindered by technical constraints and short time records.

Topics & Concepts

StormHydrographWatershedMesoscale meteorologyFlood mythEnvironmental scienceScale (ratio)Hydrology (agriculture)MeteorologyGeologyClimatologyGeographyComputer scienceCartographyGeotechnical engineeringMachine learningArchaeologyFlood Risk Assessment and ManagementHydrology and Drought AnalysisHydrology and Watershed Management Studies