4.7 Article

Reproducing an extreme flood with uncertain post-event information

Journal

HYDROLOGY AND EARTH SYSTEM SCIENCES
Volume 21, Issue 7, Pages 3597-3618

Publisher

COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
DOI: 10.5194/hess-21-3597-2017

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Honduras (UNAH) [75000511-01]
  2. CNDS research school
  3. Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (Sida) through International Science Programme (ISP) at Uppsala University [54100006]
  4. SNIC through Uppsala Multidisciplinary Center for Advanced Computational Science (UPPMAX) [p2011010]
  5. High Performance Computing Center North (HPC2N) [SNIC 2015/1-448]

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Studies for the prevention and mitigation of floods require information on discharge and extent of inundation, commonly unavailable or uncertain, especially during extreme events. This study was initiated by the devastating flood in Tegucigalpa, the capital of Honduras, when Hurricane Mitch struck the city. In this study we hypothesized that it is possible to estimate, in a trustworthy way considering large data uncertainties, this extreme 1998 flood discharge and the extent of the inundations that followed from a combination of models and post-event measured data. Postevent data collected in 2000 and 2001 were used to estimate discharge peaks, times of peak, and high-water marks. These data were used in combination with rain data from two gauges to drive and constrain a combination of well-known modelling tools: TOPMODEL, Muskingum-Cunge-Todini routing, and the LISFLOOD-FP hydraulic model. Simulations were performed within the generalized likelihood uncertainty estimation (GLUE) uncertainty-analysis framework. The model combination predicted peak discharge, times of peaks, and more than 90% of the observed highwater marks within the uncertainty bounds of the evaluation data. This allowed an inundation likelihood map to be produced. Observed high-water marks could not be reproduced at a few locations on the floodplain. Identifications of these locations are useful to improve model set-up, model structure, or post-event data-estimation methods. Rainfall data were of central importance in simulating the times of peak and results would be improved by a better spatial assessment of rainfall, e. g. from radar data or a denser rain-gauge net-work. Our study demonstrated that it was possible, considering the uncertainty in the post-event data, to reasonably reproduce the extreme Mitch flood in Tegucigalpa in spite of no hydrometric gauging during the event. The method proposed here can be part of a Bayesian framework in which more events can be added into the analysis as they become available.

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