Modeling Flash Floods in Small Ungaged Watersheds using Embedded GIS

Effective prediction of localized flash flood regions for an approaching rainfall event requires an in-depth knowledge of the land surface and stream characteristics of the forecast area. Flash Flood Guidance (FFG) is currently formulated once or twice a day at the county level by River Forecast Ce...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Knocke, Ethan William
Other Authors: Geography
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
GIS
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/31312
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-02222006-223757/
id ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-31312
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-313122020-09-26T05:35:38Z Modeling Flash Floods in Small Ungaged Watersheds using Embedded GIS Knocke, Ethan William Geography Carstensen, Laurence William Jr. Kibler, David F. Heatwole, Conrad D. Rainfall GIS Flash Flood Hydrologic Modeling Effective prediction of localized flash flood regions for an approaching rainfall event requires an in-depth knowledge of the land surface and stream characteristics of the forecast area. Flash Flood Guidance (FFG) is currently formulated once or twice a day at the county level by River Forecast Centers (RFC) in the U.S. using modeling systems that contain coarse, generalized land and stream characteristics and hydrologic runoff techniques that often are not calibrated for the forecast region of a given National Weather Service (NWS) office. This research investigates the application of embedded geographic information systems (GIS) modeling techniques to generate a localized flash flood model for individual small watersheds at a five minute scale and tests the model using historical case storms to determine its accuracy in the FFG process. This model applies the Soil Conservation Service (SCS) curve number (CN) method and synthetic dimensionless unit hydrograph (UH), and Muskingum stream routing modeling technique to formulate flood characteristics and rapid update FFG for the study area of interest. The end result of this study is a GIS-based Flash Flood Forecasting system for ungaged small watersheds within a study area of the Blacksburg NWS forecast region. This system can then be used by forecasters to assess which watersheds are at higher risk for flooding, how much additional rainfall would be needed to initiate flooding, and when the streams of that region will overflow their banks. Results show that embedding these procedures into GIS is possible and utilizing the GIS interface can be helpful in FFG analysis, but uncertainty in CN and soil moisture can be problematic in effectively simulating the rainfall-runoff process at this greatly enhanced spatial and temporal scale. Master of Science 2014-03-14T20:32:04Z 2014-03-14T20:32:04Z 2006-01-27 2006-02-22 2006-04-14 2006-04-14 Thesis etd-02222006-223757 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/31312 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-02222006-223757/ EthanKnocke_ETD.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Rainfall
GIS
Flash Flood
Hydrologic Modeling
spellingShingle Rainfall
GIS
Flash Flood
Hydrologic Modeling
Knocke, Ethan William
Modeling Flash Floods in Small Ungaged Watersheds using Embedded GIS
description Effective prediction of localized flash flood regions for an approaching rainfall event requires an in-depth knowledge of the land surface and stream characteristics of the forecast area. Flash Flood Guidance (FFG) is currently formulated once or twice a day at the county level by River Forecast Centers (RFC) in the U.S. using modeling systems that contain coarse, generalized land and stream characteristics and hydrologic runoff techniques that often are not calibrated for the forecast region of a given National Weather Service (NWS) office. This research investigates the application of embedded geographic information systems (GIS) modeling techniques to generate a localized flash flood model for individual small watersheds at a five minute scale and tests the model using historical case storms to determine its accuracy in the FFG process. This model applies the Soil Conservation Service (SCS) curve number (CN) method and synthetic dimensionless unit hydrograph (UH), and Muskingum stream routing modeling technique to formulate flood characteristics and rapid update FFG for the study area of interest. The end result of this study is a GIS-based Flash Flood Forecasting system for ungaged small watersheds within a study area of the Blacksburg NWS forecast region. This system can then be used by forecasters to assess which watersheds are at higher risk for flooding, how much additional rainfall would be needed to initiate flooding, and when the streams of that region will overflow their banks. Results show that embedding these procedures into GIS is possible and utilizing the GIS interface can be helpful in FFG analysis, but uncertainty in CN and soil moisture can be problematic in effectively simulating the rainfall-runoff process at this greatly enhanced spatial and temporal scale. === Master of Science
author2 Geography
author_facet Geography
Knocke, Ethan William
author Knocke, Ethan William
author_sort Knocke, Ethan William
title Modeling Flash Floods in Small Ungaged Watersheds using Embedded GIS
title_short Modeling Flash Floods in Small Ungaged Watersheds using Embedded GIS
title_full Modeling Flash Floods in Small Ungaged Watersheds using Embedded GIS
title_fullStr Modeling Flash Floods in Small Ungaged Watersheds using Embedded GIS
title_full_unstemmed Modeling Flash Floods in Small Ungaged Watersheds using Embedded GIS
title_sort modeling flash floods in small ungaged watersheds using embedded gis
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/31312
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-02222006-223757/
work_keys_str_mv AT knockeethanwilliam modelingflashfloodsinsmallungagedwatershedsusingembeddedgis
_version_ 1719341789906731008