Himalayan hazard cascades – modern and medieval outburst floods in Pokhara, Nepal

Author:

Fischer Melanie1ORCID,Lehnigk Karin2,Lützow Natalie1ORCID,Brettin Jana1,Veh Georg1,Larsen Isaac J.2,Korup Oliver13,Walz Ariane1

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Environmental Science and Geography University of Potsdam Potsdam Germany

2. Department of Geosciences University of Massachusetts Amherst Amherst Massachusetts USA

3. Institute of Geosciences University of Potsdam Potsdam Germany

Abstract

AbstractIn May 2012, a sediment‐laden flood along the Seti Khola (= river) caused 72 fatalities and widespread devastation for > 40 km in Pokhara, Nepal's second largest city. The flood was the terminal phase of a hazard cascade that likely began with a major rock‐slope collapse in the Annapurna Massif upstream, followed by intermittent ponding of meltwater and subsequent outburst flooding. Similar hazard cascades have been reported in other mountain belts, but peak discharges for these events have rarely been quantified. We use two hydrodynamic models to simulate the extent and geomorphic impacts of the 2012 flood and attempt to reconstruct the likely water discharge linked to even larger medieval sediment pulses. The latter are reported to have deposited several cubic kilometres of sediment in the Pokhara Valley. The process behind these sediment pulses is debated. We traced evidence of aggradation along the Seti Khola during field surveys and from RapidEye satellite images. We use two steady‐state flood models, HEC‐RAS and ANUGA, and high‐resolution topographic data, to constrain the initial flood discharge with the lowest mismatch between observed and predicted flood extents. We explore the physically plausible range of simplified flood scenarios, from meteorological (1000 m3 s−1) to cataclysmic outburst floods (600,000 m3 s−1). We find that the 2012 flood most likely had a peak discharge of 3700 m3 s−1 in the upper Seti Khola and attenuated to 500 m3 s−1 when arriving in Pokhara city. Simulations of larger outburst floods produce extensive backwater effects in tributary valleys that match with the locations of upstream‐dipping medieval‐age slackwater sediments in several tributaries of the Seti Khola. Our findings are consistent with the notion that the medieval sediment pulses were linked to outburst floods with peak discharges of >50,000 m3 s−1, though discharge may have been an order of magnitude higher.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Universität Potsdam

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

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

Reference88 articles.

1. Flood Analysis at Ramghat, Pokhara, Nepal Using HEC-RAS

2. Basnet K. Acharya D. Bhandari K.P.&Sadadev B.B.(2019)Floodplain Mapping using HEC‐RAS (A Case Study of Seti River Pokhara) Pokhara.

3. Catastrophic glacial-lake outburst flooding of the Patagonian Ice Sheet

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