Abstract
Abstract. Floods resulting from river ice jams pose a great risk to many riverside municipalities in Canada. The location of an ice jam is mainly influenced by channel morphology. The goal of this work was therefore to develop a simplified geospatial model to estimate the predisposition of a river channel to ice jams. Rather than predicting the timing of river ice breakup, the main question here was to predict where the broken ice is susceptible to jam based on the river's geomorphological characteristics. Thus, six parameters referred to potential causes for ice jams in the literature were initially selected: presence of an island, narrowing of the channel, high sinuosity, presence of a bridge, confluence of rivers, and slope break. A GIS-based tool was used to generate the aforementioned factors over regular-spaced segments along the entire channel using available geospatial data. An ice jam predisposition index (IJPI) was calculated by combining the weighted optimal factors. Three Canadian rivers (province of Québec) were chosen as test sites. The resulting maps were assessed from historical observations and local knowledge. Results show that 77 % of the observed ice jam sites on record occurred in river sections that the model considered as having high or medium predisposition. This leaves 23 % of false negative errors (missed occurrence). Between 7 and 11 % of the highly predisposed river sections did not have an ice jam on record (false-positive cases). Results, limitations, and potential improvements are discussed.
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
Reference29 articles.
1. Banshchikova, L. S.: Monitoring of the Ice Jamming Process in Rivers Using Spatiotemporal Plots of the Water Levels, Russ. Meteorol. Hydrol., 33, 600–604, 2008.
2. Beltaos, S.: “Chapter 3, Ice Jam Processes”, in: River Ice Jams, 71–104, Water Resources Publications, 1995.
3. Beltaos, S.: Progress in the study and management of river ice jam, Cold Reg. Sci. Technol., 51, 2–19, 2008.
4. Beltaos, S.: “Chapter 6, Onset of breakup”, in: River Ice Breakup, edited by: Beltaos, S., Water Resources Publications, LLC, 480 pp., 2009.
5. Beltaos, S. and Prowse, T. D.: Climate impacts on extreme ice-jam events in Canadian rivers, Hydrolog. Sci. J., 46, 157–181, https://doi.org/10.1080/02626660109492807, 2001.
Cited by
15 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献