Back to Search Start Over

On river-floodplain interaction and hydrograph skewness.

Authors :
Fleischmann, Ayan S.
Paiva, Rodrigo C. D.
Collischonn, Walter
Sorribas, Mino V.
Pontes, Paulo R. M.
Source :
Water Resources Research; Oct2016, Vol. 52 Issue 10, p7615-7630, 15p
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Understanding hydrological processes occurring within a basin by looking at its outlet hydrograph can improve and foster comprehension of ungauged regions. In this context, we present an extensive examination of the roles that floodplains play on driving hydrograph shapes. Observations of many river hydrographs with large floodplain influence are carried out and indicate that a negative skewness of the hydrographs is present among many of them. Through a series of numerical experiments and analytical reasoning, we show how the relationship between flood wave celerity and discharge in such systems is responsible for determining the hydrograph shapes. The more water inundates the floodplains upstream of the observed point, the more negatively skewed is the observed hydrograph. A case study is performed in the Amazon River Basin, where major rivers with large floodplain attenuation (e.g., Purus, Madeira, and Juruá) are identified with higher negative skewness in the respective hydrographs. Finally, different wetland types could be distinguished by using this feature, e.g., wetlands maintained by endogenous processes, from wetlands governed by overbank flow (along river floodplains). A metric of hydrograph skewness was developed to quantify this effect, based on the time derivative of discharge. Together with the skewness concept, it may be used in other studies concerning the relevance of floodplain attenuation in large, ungauged rivers, where remote sensing data (e.g., satellite altimetry) can be very useful. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Subjects

Subjects :
FLOODPLAINS
HYDROGRAPHY

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00431397
Volume :
52
Issue :
10
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Water Resources Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
119533078
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/2016WR019233