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Hydrometeorological analysis and forecasting of a 3-day flash-flood-triggering desert rainstorm.

Authors :
Rinat, Yair
Marra, Francesco
Armon, Moshe
Metzger, Asher
Levi, Yoav
Khain, Pavel
Vadislavsky, Elyakom
Rosensaft, Marcelo
Morin, Efrat
Source :
Natural Hazards & Earth System Sciences Discussions; 7/2/2020, p1-35, 35p
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Flash floods are among the most devastating and lethal natural hazards. In 2018, three flash-flood episodes resulted in 46 casualties in the deserts of Israel and Jordan alone. This paper presents the hydrometeorological analysis and forecasting of a substantial storm (25-27 Apr 2018) that hit an arid desert basin (Zin, ~ 1400 km<superscript>2</superscript>, southern Israel), claiming 12 human lives. Our aim was to: (a) spatially assess the severity of the storm, (b) quantify the time scale of the hydrological response, and (c) evaluate the available operational precipitation forecasting. Return periods of the storm's maximal rain intensities were derived locally, at 1-km<superscript>2</superscript> resolution, using weather radar data and a novel statistical methodology. A high-resolution grid-based hydrological model was used to study the intra-basin flash-flood magnitudes, which were consistent with direct information from witnesses. The model was further used to examine the hydrological response to different forecast scenarios. A small portion of the basin (1-20 %) experienced extreme precipitation intensities (75- to 100-year return period), resulting in a local hydrological response of a high magnitude (10- to 50-year return period). Hillslope runoff, initiated minutes after the intense rainfall occurred, reached the streams and resulted in peak discharge within tens of minutes. Available deterministic operational precipitation forecasts poorly predicted the hydrological response in the studied basins (tens to hundreds of km<superscript>2</superscript>) mostly due to location inaccuracy. There was no gain from assimilating radar estimates in the numerical weather-prediction model. Therefore, we suggest using deterministic forecasts with caution as it might lead to fatal decision making. To cope with such errors a novel cost-effective methodology is applied by spatially shifting the forecasted precipitation fields. In this way, flash-flood occurrences were captured in most of the sub-basins, resulting in few false alarms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
21959269
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Natural Hazards & Earth System Sciences Discussions
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
144363736
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/nhess-2020-189