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The Paroxysmal Precipitation of the Desert: Flash Floods in the Southwestern United States.

Authors :
Smith, James A.
Baeck, Mary Lynn
Yang, Long
Signell, Julia
Morin, Efrat
Goodrich, David C.
Source :
Water Resources Research; Dec2019, Vol. 55 Issue 12, p10218-10247, 30p
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The 14 September 2015 Hildale, Utah, storm resulted in 20 flash flood fatalities, making it the most deadly natural disaster in Utah history; it is the quintessential example of the "paroxysmal precipitation of the desert". The measured peak discharge from Maxwell Canyon at a drainage area of 5.3 km2 was 266 m3/s, a value that exceeds envelope curve peaks for Utah. The 14 September 2015 flash flood reflects features common to other major flash flood events in the region, as well as unique features. The flood was produced by a hailstorm that was moving rapidly from southwest to northeast and intensified as it interacted with complex terrain. Polarimetric radar observations show that the storm exhibited striking temporal variability, with the Maxwell Canyon tributary of Short Creek and a small portion of the East Fork Virgin River basin experiencing extreme precipitation. Periods of extreme rainfall rates for the 14 September 2015 storm are characterized by KDP signatures of extreme rainfall in polarimetric radar measurements. Similar KDP signatures characterized multiple storms that have produced record and near‐record flood peaks in Colorado Plateau watersheds. The climatology of monsoon thunderstorms that produce flash floods exhibits striking spatial heterogeneities in storm occurrence and motion. The hydroclimatology of flash flooding in arid/semiarid watersheds of the southwestern United States exhibits relatively weak dependence on drainage basin area. Large flood peaks over a broad range of basin scales can be produced by small thunderstorms like the 14 September 2015 Hildale Storm, which pass close to the outlet. Key Points: The 14 September 2015 Hildale storm was a hailstorm that produced catastrophic flooding in southern UtahThe climatology of monsoon thunderstorms that produce flash floods in the southwestern United States exhibits large spatial heterogeneityRecord flood peaks over a wide range of basin scales are produced by "small," monsoon storms that pass close to the basin outlet [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00431397
Volume :
55
Issue :
12
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Water Resources Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
141436639
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1029/2019WR025480