RAINFALL TRIGGERING OF POST-FIRE DEBRIS FLOWS OVER A 28-YEAR PERIOD NEAR EL PORTAL, CALIFORNIA, USA

D. Staley, J. D. Graff, G. Stock, Kellen Takenaka, Alan J. Gallegos, C. Neptune
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Wildfires frequently affect the steep hillslopes near El Portal, California (United States), a small community established during the California Gold Rush in the mid-1800s. In addition to the historical significance of El Portal, State Route 140 (SR 140) is a major transportation and economic corridor connecting the San Joaquin Valley to Yosemite National Park (YNP). In 2019, an estimated 4.5 million tourists visited and accessed YNP via SR 140. In the years after wildfires, the burned watersheds produced debris flows during intense rainfall, impacting the El Portal community and motorists traveling on SR 140 and local roads. The steepness of the hillslopes and confinement of the valley limit options for mitigating debris-flow risk. As such, emergency managers are left with evacuation orders or temporary road closures as the best options for risk reduction. The effectiveness of these options is highly dependent on establishing an accurate local rainfall intensity-duration threshold that officials can use to guide emergency response actions and timing. We present an overview of the rainfall conditions that initiated 12 post-fire debris-flow events near El Portal from 1991 to 2018 and objectively define rainfall intensity-duration thresholds from triggering rainfall rates. Our results highlight the modest rainfall rates that triggered debris flows in these steep watersheds, while radar data from more recent events (2012–2018) portray the spatial variability of intense rainfall in the area. Additional rainfall monitoring is needed to provide a robust rainfall threshold that will effectively mitigate risk for residents and motorists while minimizing the impact of road closures and evacuations.
美国加利福尼亚州埃尔portal附近28年的降雨触发火灾后泥石流
野火经常影响加利福尼亚州(美国)El Portal附近的陡峭山坡,这是一个在19世纪中期加利福尼亚淘金热期间建立的小社区。除了El Portal的历史意义之外,140号州际公路(SR 140)是连接圣华金山谷和约塞米蒂国家公园(YNP)的主要交通和经济走廊。2019年,估计有450万游客通过SR 140访问了YNP。在野火之后的几年里,在强降雨期间,燃烧的流域产生了泥石流,影响了El Portal社区和在SR 140和当地道路上行驶的驾驶者。山坡的陡峭和山谷的限制限制了减轻泥石流风险的选择。因此,应急管理人员只能发出疏散命令或暂时封闭道路,作为减少风险的最佳选择。这些方案的有效性高度依赖于建立一个准确的当地降雨强度-持续时间阈值,官员可以使用该阈值来指导应急响应行动和时间安排。我们概述了1991年至2018年在El Portal附近引发12次火灾后泥石流事件的降雨条件,并客观地定义了触发降雨率的降雨强度-持续时间阈值。我们的研究结果强调了在这些陡峭流域引发泥石流的适度降雨率,而近期事件(2012-2018年)的雷达数据则描绘了该地区强降雨的空间变异性。需要额外的降雨监测,以提供一个强大的降雨阈值,有效降低居民和驾车者的风险,同时最大限度地减少道路封闭和疏散的影响。
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