Title of article :
Analysis of the linkage between rain and flood regime and its application to regional flood frequency estimation
Author/Authors :
Juraj M Cunderlik، نويسنده , , Donald H. Burn، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2002
Abstract :
Improving techniques of flood frequency estimation at ungauged sites is one of the foremost goals of contemporary hydrology. River flood regime is a resultant reflection of a composite catchment hydrologic response to flood producing processes. In this sense the process of identifying homogeneous pooling groups can be plausibly based on catchment similarity in flood regime. Unfortunately the application of any pooling approach that is based on flood regime is restricted to gauged sites. Because flood regime can be markedly determined by rainfall regime, catchment similarity in rainfall regime can be an alternative option for identifying flood frequency pooling groups. An advantage of such a pooling approach is that rainfall data are usually spatially and temporary more abundant than flood data and the approach can also be applied at ungauged sites. Therefore in this study we have quantified the linkage between rainfall and flood regime and explored the appropriateness of substituting rainfall regime for flood regime in regional pooling schemes. Two different approaches to describing rainfall regime similarity using tools of directional statistics have been tested and used for evaluation of the potential of rainfall regime for identification of hydrologically homogeneous pooling groups. The outputs were compared to an existing pooling framework adopted in the Flood Estimation Handbook. The results demonstrate that regional pooling based on rainfall regime information leads to a high number of initially homogeneous groups and seems to be a sound pooling alternative for catchments with a close linkage between rain and flood regimes.
Keywords :
Rainfall and flood regime , Peaks-over-threshold , Directional statistics , Modality , Site-focused pooling , Regional flood frequency analysis , Great Britain , Seasonality
Journal title :
Journal of Hydrology
Journal title :
Journal of Hydrology