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Midwest Regional Flood Frequency Analysis

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Presentation on theme: "Midwest Regional Flood Frequency Analysis"— Presentation transcript:

1 Midwest Regional Flood Frequency Analysis
CPT Ben Bigelow Dr. David Maidment Dr. Edward Holley University of Texas at Austin

2 Project Objectives Develop a GIS-based Map product as a base map
Determine a relationship between discharge and drainage area Test on Des Moines River Basin Develop design hydrographs Assess routing methodology for Des Moines and Mississippi University of Texas at Austin

3 Midwest Flood Discharge -Duration- Frequency
University of Texas at Austin

4 Test Area Part of the Upper Mississippi Basin 11 gages
Des Moines - 5 Raccoon - 1 Iowa-1 Focused test on Des Moines River University of Texas at Austin

5 Data Development 500 m DEM Delineated drainage areas for each gage
Used CRWR-PREPRO to develop data Results in an HMS basin file for the Des Moines Basin and for the total test area University of Texas at Austin

6 Des Moines River 5 gaging stations
Smoothed frequency curves available for all gages Van Meter Gage on Raccoon River Total drainage area is sq miles University of Texas at Austin

7 Des Moines DDF Curves University of Texas at Austin

8 Regional Flood Frequency
Four Variables: Duration (D), Area (A), Frequency & Volume Mean discharge, Q = Volume/Duration Q(A, D) = Q(A, 3)*[Q(D)/Q(3)] where Q(A, D) is the design mean discharge from area A for the maximum D day period in the flood Q(A, 3) is the discharge-area function for the maximum 3-day period in the flood Q(D)/Q(3) is the discharge-duration ratio University of Texas at Austin

9 Area Function Comparison
Mississippi River Basin Des Moines River Basin Y: Daily Average flow for maximum 3-day volume X: Drainage Area Regression used to find best fit function Mississippi and Des Moines clearly trend differently Inadequate data to determine trend from square mile drainage area University of Texas at Austin

10 Duration Function Comparison
Mississippi River Des Moines River Y: Average [ Q(D)/ Q (3)] where D = 1,3,10,15 & 30 days X: Duration Spread of the data points are the observed values at gages University of Texas at Austin

11 Flow Determination (cont)
Use analytical functions to estimate the discharge for other durations and compare to values from frequency analysis at individual gages Q(A,D) = Q(A, 3)*[Q(D)/Q(3)] The analytical functions were tested for both the large (Mississippi) basin (4 gages) and the small (Des Moines) basin (6 gages). University of Texas at Austin

12 Des Moines Discharge Comparisons
Actual Values: Blue points Analytical Function: Red Line University of Texas at Austin

13 Mississippi Discharge Comparisons
University of Texas at Austin

14 Design Discharge Profile, Des Moines River
1-day, 100-year peak flow Raccoon River University of Texas at Austin

15 Design Discharge Profile, Mississippi River
Iowa-Cedar Rock Des Moines 1-day, 100-yr peak flow Des Moines Iowa-Cedar Rock University of Texas at Austin

16 Conclusions Discharge,Q is a function of duration, D, area, A, and frequency choose a frequency (100 years) choose a reference duration (3 days) Q(A, D) = Q(A, 3) * [Q(D)/Q(3)] tests on Des Moines basin (6 gages) and Upper Mississippi (4 gages) University of Texas at Austin

17 Conclusions Within a river basin (Des Moines or Upper Mississippi)
discharge-area function is nearly linear discharge-duration ratio is consistent among all gages These functions are scale dependent and different for Mississippi as compared to Des Moines University of Texas at Austin

18 Conclusions Flow profiling tool allows continuous plot of design discharge along the river University of Texas at Austin


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