The 1870s Saskatchewan River avulsion: Ice jam or open water flood? A probabilistic approach for cold climate river avulsions

Author:

Kupferschmidt Cody1ORCID,Arnaud Emmanuelle2

Affiliation:

1. School of Engineering University of Guelph Guelph ON Canada

2. School of Environmental Sciences University of Guelph Guelph ON Canada

Abstract

AbstractCold climate rivers can experience avulsions due to both open water and ice jam flooding; however, most existing models for evaluating avulsions only consider open water flows. We present a novel approach for determining site‐specific probabilities of avulsion cause (open water vs. ice jam flooding) by combining historical flow data, channel cross‐sections and known avulsion history for the study area. The approach is applied to the Cumberland Marshes region of the Saskatchewan River in Central Canada, which experienced an avulsion in the mid‐1870s that some researchers have suggested may have been triggered by an ice jam. For the study area, overbank flooding was found to occur much more frequently due to ice jams than open‐water floods. Based on an average avulsion return period of 660 years in the study area, the probability of historical avulsions being caused by ice jam flooding was estimated to range from 61% and 80%, using a range of annual ice jam probabilities between 0.1 and 0.5. Results from the study suggest ice jam flooding as the most likely cause of the 1870s avulsion, which is also supported by historical evidence. The developed methodology is relatively simple to apply and could be easily implemented at other cold‐climate sites to evaluate avulsion risks.

Funder

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Earth-Surface Processes,Geography, Planning and Development

Reference62 articles.

1. [IACWD] Interagency Committee on Water Data. (1982)Guidelines for Determining Flood Flow Frequency: Bulletin 17B of the Hydrology Subcommittee: Office of Water Data Coordination U.S. Geological Survey Washington: D.C. USA 28 p.

2. [PFRA] Prairie Farm Rehabilitation Administration. (1954a)Saskatchewan River Reclamation Project: Hydrometric Surveys 1954 Interim Report No. 8 Winnipeg Canada.

3. [PFRA] Prairie Farm Rehabilitation Administration. (1954b)Saskatchewan River Reclamation Project: Outline of Investigations Interim Report No. 6 Winnipeg Canada.

4. [USACE] United States Army Corps of Engineers. (2016)HEC‐RAS River Analysis System User's Manual: Institute for Water Resources:https://www.hec.usace.army.mil/software/hec-ras/documentation/HEC-RAS%205.0%20Users%20Manual.pdf(accessed February 2020)

5. [WSC] Water Survey of Canada. (2020)Historical Hydrometric Data. Accessed online fromhttps://wateroffice.ec.gc.ca/mainmenu/historical_data_index_e.html

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