What is flooding?
Flooding is an overflowing of water onto land that is
normally dry. It can happen during heavy rains, when ocean
waves come onshore, when snow melts too fast, or when dams
or levees break. Flooding may happen with only a few inches
of water, or it may cover a house to the rooftop. The most
dangerous flood event, the flash
flood, happens quickly with little or no warning;
other flooding events occur over a long period and may last
days, weeks, or longer.
What is a river flood?
A river flood occurs when water levels rise in a river
due to excessive rain from tropical systems making landfall,
persistent thunderstorms over the same area for extended
periods of time, combined rainfall and snowmelt, or an ice
jam.
What is coastal flooding?
Coastal flooding occurs when a hurricane, tropical
storm, or tropical depression produces a deadly storm surge
that overwhelms coastal areas as it makes landfall. Storm
surge is water pushed on shore by the force of the winds
swirling around the storm. This advancing surge combines
with the normal tides to create the hurricane storm tide,
which can increase the average water level 15 feet or more.
The greatest natural disaster in the United States, in terms
of loss of life, was caused by a storm surge and associated
coastal flooding from the great Galveston, Texas, hurricane
of 1900. At least 8,000 people lost their lives.
What is inland flooding?
When tropical cyclones move inland, they are typically
accompanied by torrential rain. If the decaying storm moves
slowly over land, it can produce rainfall amounts of 20 to
40 inches over several days. Widespread flash flooding and
river flooding can result.
What is a flash flood?
A flash flood is a rapid rise of water
along a stream or low-lying urban area. Flash flooding
occurs within six hours of a significant rain event and is
usually caused by intense storms that produce heavy rainfall
in a short amount of time. Excessive rainfall that causes
rivers and streams to swell rapidly and overflow their banks
is frequently associated with hurricanes and tropical
storms, large clusters of thunderstorms, supercells, or
squall lines. Other types of flash floods can occur from dam
or levee failures, or a sudden release of water held by an
ice jam. Heavy rainfall in the mountains can cause
downstream canyon flooding.
Why is a flash flood so dangerous?
Flash floods can occur with little or no warning. Flash
flood damage and most fatalities tend to occur in areas
immediately adjacent to a stream or arroyo. Flash floods are
very strong -- they can roll boulders, tear out trees,
destroy buildings and bridges, and scour out new channels.
Rapidly rising water can reach heights of 30 feet or more.
Flash flood-producing rains falling on steep terrain can
weaken soil and trigger catastrophic mud slides that damage
homes, roads, and property.
What areas are at risk from flash floods?
Densely
populated areas are at a high risk for flash floods. The
construction of buildings, highways, driveways, and parking
lots increases runoff by reducing the amount of rain
absorbed by the ground. This runoff increases the flash
flood potential.
Sometimes, streams through cities and towns are routed
underground into storm drains. During heavy rain, the storm
drains can become overwhelmed and flood roads and buildings.
Low spots, such as underpasses, underground parking garages,
and basements can become death traps.
Areas near rivers are at risk from flash floods.
Embankments, known as levees, are often built along rivers
and are used to prevent high water from flooding bordering
land. In 1993, many levees failed along the Mississippi
River, resulting in devastating flash floods. The city of
New Orleans experienced massive devastating flooding days
after Hurricane Katrina came onshore in 2005 due to the
failure of levees designed to protect the city.
Dam failures can send a sudden destructive wall of water
downstream. Heavy rainfall saturates and weakens
earth-filled dams, which make up about 80 percent of the
approximately 76,000 dams in the U.S. In 1889 a dam break
upstream from Johnstown, Pennsylvania, released a 30-40 foot
wall of water that killed 2200 people within minutes.
Vacationing or recreating along streams or rivers can be
a risk if there are thunderstorms in the area. A creek only
6 inches deep in mountainous areas can swell to a 10-foot
deep raging river in less than an hour if a thunderstorm
lingers over an area for an extended period of time.
Mountains and steep hills produce rapid runoff and causes
streams to rise quickly. Rocks and clay soils do not allow
much water to infiltrate the ground. Saturated soil also can
lead rapidly to flash flooding
Very intense rainfall can produce flooding even on dry
soil. In the West, most canyons, small streams and dry
arroyos are not easily recognizable as a source of danger. A
wall of water 10-15 feet high can scour a canyon suddenly.
Additional high-risk locations include low water
crossings, recent burn areas in mountains, and urban areas
from pavement and roofs which concentrate rainfall runoff.
Ice jams and snowmelt can help cause flash floods. A deep
snowpack increases runoff produced by melting snow. Heavy
spring rains falling on melting snowpack can produce
disastrous flash flooding. Melting snowpack may also
contribute to flash floods produced by ice jams on creeks
and rivers. Thick layers of ice often form on streams and
rivers during the winter. Melting snow and/or warm rain
running into the streams may lift and break this ice,
allowing large chunks of ice to jam against bridges or other
structures. This causes the water to rapidly rise behind the
ice jam. If the water is suddenly released, serious flash
flooding could occur downstream. Huge chunks of ice can be
pushed onto the shore and through houses and buildings. |