Search results for "Ash"

showing 10 items of 1718 documents

Flash floods in Mediterranean ephemeral streams in Valencia Region (Spain)

2016

Summary Ephemeral streams are typical Mediterranean fluvial systems with high risk of flash flooding, and few data are available about these systems in most locales. However, the SAIH network (Automatic Hydrological Information Systems) of the Jucar River Water Authority has been providing detailed information about ephemeral streams in Spain every 5 min since 1988. Using these data, we evaluated the processes of rainfall–runoff conversion and flood generation in five Mediterranean ephemeral streams ranging in size from 25 to 450 km 2 . To provide a general framework for hydrological analysis, the study included 142 flash flood events registered between 1989 and 2007. A more detailed analys…

Hydrology0208 environmental biotechnologyAntecedent moistureHydrograph02 engineering and technologyStructural basin020801 environmental engineeringRunoff modelWater balanceFlash floodEnvironmental sciencePrecipitationSurface runoffWater Science and TechnologyJournal of Hydrology
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A Rainfall Simulator Laboratory Approach to Determine the Impact of Ash Depth on Runoff Generation and Soil Losses

2020

Ash cover the forest fire affected soil for some weeks or months and act as a key factor to determine the soil and water losses. Ash depth is researched here to determine how affect the soil detachment and the runoff generation. Seventy rainfall simulation experiments on paired 0.50 m2 plots (five plots with 0, 1, 2, 3, 5, 10, 15- and 30-mm ash depth), and repeated one week later) under thunderstorms of 48 mmh-1 for one hour were carried out under laboratory conditions. In the first experiment, after the bed of ash was applied, the results show that ash depth determines the runoff rates as they reduce the discharge from 23.1% to 13.9%. The sediment concentration increased from 23.8 till 38.…

HydrologyCrust formationCompactionashSedimentrunofflcsh:AerosionsoilsedimentRainfall simulatorSoil waterErosionThunderstormEnvironmental sciencelcsh:General WorksSurface runofffireTERRAenVISION 2019
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WEPP calibration for improved predictions of interrill erosion in semi-arid to arid environments

2013

Abstract Modeling soil erosion contributes to the understanding of the erosion processes and needs to predict accurately the erosion rates under different environmental conditions. Few studies have investigated the WEPP's applicability for arid and semi-arid conditions that differ from those where the model was developed. This research was carried out to evaluate and improve the WEPP model for arid and semiarid regions for interrill erosion using a rainfall simulator at plot scale. The results showed that measured interrill erosion rates ranged from 9.3 × 10− 6 to 89.6 × 10− 6 kg m− 2 s− 1. In comparison, the WEPP-interrill erosion prediction values were on average 14.5 times lower than the…

HydrologyErosion predictionScale (ratio)ErosionCalibrationSoil ScienceEnvironmental scienceWEPPAridNash–Sutcliffe model efficiency coefficientStream powerGeoderma
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Flood events in Mediterranean ephemeral streams (ramblas) in Valencia region, Spain

2001

This article deals with flood events in Mediterranean ephemeral streams typical of the Valencia region. The combination of the basin physical characteristics steep slopes, sparse vegetation, thin soils and permeable rock. and intense, heavy and irregularly distributed rain, generates flash floods. Runoff generation is sudden, giving rise to flash floods with sharp, narrow hydrographs with short time lags. The high amount of runoff is, nevertheless, only a small fraction of the total rainfall, since the characteristics of the river basins are such that infiltration of large amounts of water occurs. Using daily hydrological data from the Rambla de la Viuda basin and 5-min data from both the B…

HydrologyMediterranean climategeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryFlood mythHidrologiaDrainage basinStructural basinRunoff modelInfiltration (hydrology)Flash floodSurface runoffGeologyEarth-Surface ProcessesCATENA
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Testing the long term applicability of USLE-M equation at a olive orchard microcatchment in Spain

2016

Abstract Universal Soil Loss Equation USLE-based erosion models have been used extensively to complement erosion measurements, to understand the interactions of the different geophysical features into erosion processes and to assess adequate alternative management practices and scenarios analyses. Despite its proved usefulness on different land-uses around the world, there is an urgent need to set up simple tools which do not require an advanced management expertise in terms of both choose of model parameters and calculation ability and which are accurate particularly at the event scale. In this paper the suitability of the Modified USLE (USLE-M) model at the event and the annual scale were…

HydrologyScale (ratio)USLE-M model RUSLE olive orchard crop factor soil losses sediment delivery0208 environmental biotechnologySediment02 engineering and technology020801 environmental engineeringTerm (time)Universal Soil Loss EquationCrop factorErosionSettore AGR/08 - Idraulica Agraria E Sistemazioni Idraulico-ForestaliEnvironmental scienceNash–Sutcliffe model efficiency coefficientEarth-Surface ProcessesEvent (probability theory)CATENA
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THE IMPACT OF FIRE ON REDISTRIBUTION OF SOIL ORGANIC MATTER ON A MEDITERRANEAN HILLSLOPE UNDER MAQUIA VEGETATION TYPE

2010

Soil organic matter (SOM) changes affect the CO2 atmospheric levels and is a key factor on soil fertility and soil erodibility. Fire affects ecosystems and the soil properties due to heating and post-fire soil erosion and degradation processes. In order to understand fire effects on soil organic carbon (SOC) balance research was undertaken on a fire-prone ecosystem: the Mediterranean maquia. The spatial distribution of SOC was measured in a Burnt site 6 months after a wildfire and in a Control site. Samples were collected at two different depths (0–3 and 3–10 cm) and SOC was determined. The results show that 41·8 per cent of the SOC stock was lost. This is due to the removal of the burnt ma…

HydrologySoil biodiversitySoil organic matterSoil SciencemediterraneanashSoil scienceSoil carbonDevelopmentsoil organic carbon (SOC)SpainSoil retrogression and degradationSoil waterVegetation typeEnvironmental ChemistryEnvironmental sciencemaquiaSoil fertilitySurface runofffireGeneral Environmental Science
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Hydrological effects of a layer of vegetation ash on underlying wettable and water repellent soil

2012

Abstract Hydrological processes after a wildfire may take place under soil conditions altered by heat and by the presence of ash. Soil and ash interact as a two-layer system with poorly understood hydrological properties, especially when ash covers water repellent soil. Here we quantify the effect of an ash layer (0, 5, 15 and 30 mm depth) covering wettable and water repellent soil on (i) the hydrological response and the mechanism of runoff generation and (ii) the water repellency dynamics, for a rainfall event followed by different drying periods and a second rainfall event. Laboratory rainfall simulation experiments (82.5 mm h − 1 during 40 min) at small plot-scale (0.09 m 2 ) were perfo…

HydrologySplashSoil waterSoil ScienceEnvironmental scienceSoil scienceVegetationWettingSurface runoffSubsurface flowWater contentLayer (electronics)
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One-Dimensional Transient Analysis of Rainfall Infiltration in Unsaturated Volcanic Ash

2015

The paper presents a one-dimensional hydro-mechanical analysis of rainfall infiltration in a loose volcanic ash and the utilisation of a factor of safety for the implementation of an early-warning system. Three different rainy seasons with different rainfall patterns were analysed . The analysis aims to understand the influence of the antecedent rainfall on the wetting front, the pore-water pressures and the factor of safety. The analysis was carried out in the context of a Master project of the first author at the Laboratory for Soil Mechanics of EPFL.

HydrologyUnsaturatedContext (language use)Wetting frontTransient analysisRainfall infiltrationrainfall-induced landslideunsaturated volcanic ashFactor of safetyground water seepageVolcanic AshGeologySoil mechanicsinfinity slope analysisVolcanic ashGroundwater seepage
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Derivation of Rainfall Thresholds for Flash Flood Warning in a Sicilian Basin Using a Hydrological Model

2016

Abstract The damages caused by flash floods are among the most onerous in terms of loss of lives and damage to properties. Derivation of rainfall threshold is one of the approaches commonly used for the development of flash flood warning systems. Specifically, rainfall threshold is the rainfall amount that, for a given basin area and duration, is enough to cause flooding and, therefore, it indicates the maximal sustainable rainfall for a basin. The aim of this paper is deriving flash flood-rainfall thresholds for a Sicilian basin (Italy) throughout a deterministic approach. The conceptual hydrological model TOPDM was used to estimate the amount of rainfall that, for given duration, hydrolog…

HydrologyWarning systemMeteorologySettore ICAR/02 - Costruzioni Idrauliche E Marittime E Idrologia0208 environmental biotechnologyFlooding (psychology)hydrological modelrainfall threshold02 engineering and technologyGeneral MedicineStructural basinrainfall thresholds020801 environmental engineeringRunoff modelhydrological model.Engineering (all)Hyetographflash flood; hydrological model; rainfall thresholds; Sicily; Engineering (all)Flash floodEnvironmental scienceflash floodWater contentSicilyIntensity (heat transfer)Engineering(all)Procedia Engineering
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Influence of volcanic activity on the quality of water collected in roof water catchment systems at Stromboli Island (Italy)

2013

Abstract With the aim of detailing the interaction between volcanic emissions and water harvesting by Roof Water Catchment Systems (RWCSs), the present work illustrates the results of a study carried out at Stromboli Island, a small but densely populated active volcanic area in the South of Italy. Concentrations of major and trace elements determined in RWCS waters and sediments revealed clear clues of a contamination with gases and suspended particles of volcanic origin, even if the values of those contaminants considered by the World Health Organization as dangerous for human health are always below the Maximum Admitted Concentration (MAC). In particular, cistern water showed a compositio…

Hydrologyevent.disaster_typeeducation.field_of_studygeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryPopulationParticulatesRainwater harvestingVolcanic GasesDeposition (aerosol physics)VolcanoGeochemistry and PetrologyEconomic GeologyeventWater qualityeducationGeologyVolcanic ashJournal of Geochemical Exploration
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