4.6 Article

More than heavy rain turning into fast-flowing water - a landscape perspective on the 2021 Eifel floods

期刊

NATURAL HAZARDS AND EARTH SYSTEM SCIENCES
卷 22, 期 6, 页码 1845-1856

出版社

COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
DOI: 10.5194/nhess-22-1845-2022

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  1. Helmholtz-Zentrum Potsdam -Deutsches GeoForschungsZentrum GFZ (HART EifelfloodS)
  2. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [GRK 2043/3]
  3. Bundesministerium fur Bildung und Forschung [01LP1903A/K, 01LP1902H]

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Rapidly evolving floods have severe impacts on landscape reorganisation and society. The July 2021 flood in western Germany and Belgium was a drastic event due to its coupling of landscape elements and the carried wood, sediment, and debris. Intense floods can reveal rare non-linear feedbacks and require improved anticipation, mitigation, and system understanding. This study analyzes the 14-15 July 2021 flood and identifies hillslope processes, debris mobilisation, human land use, and emerging process connections as critical dimensions.
Rapidly evolving floods are rare but powerful drivers of landscape reorganisation that have severe and long-lasting impacts on both the functions of a landscape's subsystems and the affected society. The July 2021 flood that particularly hit several river catchments of the Eifel region in western Germany and Belgium was a drastic example. While media and scientists highlighted the meteorological and hydrological aspects of this flood, it was not just the rising water levels in the main valleys that posed a hazard, caused damage, and drove environmental reorganisation. Instead, the concurrent coupling of landscape elements and the wood, sediment, and debris carried by the fast-flowing water made this flood so devastating and difficult to predict. Because more intense floods are able to interact with more landscape components, they at times reveal rare non-linear feedbacks, which may be hidden during smaller events due to their high thresholds of initiation. Here, we briefly review the boundary conditions of the 14-15 July 2021 flood and discuss the emerging features that made this event different from previous floods. We identify hillslope processes, aspects of debris mobilisation, the legacy of sustained human land use, and emerging process connections and feedbacks as critical non-hydrological dimensions of the flood. With this landscape scale perspective, we develop requirements for improved future event anticipation, mitigation, and fundamental system understanding.

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