4.7 Article

Modeling hydrologic processes associated with soil saturation and debris flow initiation during the September 2013 storm, Colorado Front Range

期刊

LANDSLIDES
卷 18, 期 5, 页码 1741-1759

出版社

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s10346-020-01582-5

关键词

Debris flows; Aspect; North-facing; South-facing; Soil moisture; Slope stability

资金

  1. Institute of International Education
  2. US Department of State Fulbright Program

向作者/读者索取更多资源

During a seven-day extreme rainfall event in September 2013 in the Colorado Front Range, it was observed that south-facing slopes were more prone to experiencing debris flows compared to north-facing slopes. By analyzing soil moisture patterns and hydrologic processes, it was determined that differences in interception and deep drainage were the primary factors leading to the saturation of south-facing slopes. The final model predicted instability at around 72% of observed debris flow initiation sites.
Seven days of extreme rainfall during September 2013 produced more than 1100 debris flows in the Colorado Front Range, about 78% of which occurred on south-facing slopes (SFS). Previously published soil moisture (volumetric water content) observations suggest that SFS were wetter than north-facing slopes (NFS) during the event, which contrasts with soil moisture patterns observed during normal conditions. Various causes have been hypothesized for the preferential saturation of SFS, but those hypotheses remain largely untested. Here, we analyze the soil moisture patterns using additional soil moisture observations, determine the hydrologic processes controlling the preferential saturation of SFS, and evaluate the importance of soil moisture in predicting the debris flow initiation sites. Soil moisture patterns are simulated using the Equilibrium Moisture from Topography, Vegetation, and Soil (EMT + VS) model. Five hypotheses are tested that may have influenced the soil moisture reversal including higher rainfall rates, lower interception rates, lower saturated water content, thinner soils, and reduced deep drainage on SFS. The EMT + VS model is coupled with an infinite slope stability model to produce factor of safety maps. The hypotheses are tested by comparing the modeled soil moisture to soil moisture observations and the debris flow initiation sites. The results suggest that differences in interception and deep drainage between SFS and NFS were primarily responsible for producing wetter SFS, but the soil moisture pattern likely played a smaller role than vegetation and slope in determining where debris flows initiated. The final model predicts instability at approximately 72% of the observed debris flow initiation sites.

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