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Upper limits for post-wildfire floods and distinction from debris flows

Brian A. Ebel

2024Science Advances12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Upper magnitude limits and scaling with basin size for post-wildfire floods are unknown. An envelope curve was estimated defining post-wildfire flood upper limits as a function of basin area. We show the importance of separating peak flows by floods versus debris flows. Post-wildfire flood maxima are a constant 43 m 3 s −1 km −2 for basins from 0.01 to 23 to 34 km 2 and then declining with added basin area according to a power law relation. Intense rainfall spatial scaling may cause the envelope curve threshold at 23 to 34 km 2 . Post-wildfire flood maxima are smaller than unburned flood maxima for similar basin area. Rainstorm comparisons indicate that post-wildfire floods are triggered by smaller precipitation depths than unburned floods. Post-wildfire exceptional floods are driven by extreme rainfall rates, in contrast to post-wildfire debris flows. Runoff rates for post-wildfire envelope floods are consistent with infiltration-excess runoff. Future increases in precipitation intensity or wildfire frequency and extent could increase post-wildfire flood upper limits.

Topics & Concepts

Flood mythDebrisEnvironmental scienceSurface runoffFlash floodPrecipitationStructural basinHydrology (agriculture)Debris flowDrainage basinMaximaGeologyMeteorologyGeomorphologyGeographyEcologyCartographyBiologyPerformance artArchaeologyGeotechnical engineeringArt historyArtOceanographyFire effects on ecosystemsLandslides and related hazardsFlood Risk Assessment and Management
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