HWRS  696F Section 002     Spring 2015            jump to class schedule

    Advanced Topics in Surface Hydrology and Modeling
                                       
original course announcement

 

Flood Hydrometeorology & Hydroclimatology
—Implications
for Global Change and Extreme Hydrology
 1-3 units on Tuesdays 5:00 – 7:30 pm
Bannister Tree-Ring Building, room 424  map

Instructors:   Katie Hirschboeck 1Victor Baker 2

1 Associate Professor of Climatology Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research
     with Joint Appointments in: Hydrology & Water Resources,

     Atmospheric Sciences, and the School of Geography & Development

2 Regents Professor, Hydrology & Water Resources, with Joint Appointments
      in Geosciences and Planetary Sciences


COURSE DESCRIPTION 

This graduate seminar course will focus on the meteorological and climate-related causes of floods, both regionally and globally, and the overarching scientific issues related to floods.  After an overview of flood-generating processes, participants will examine and present case studies of a selection of past major flood events in the United States based on published post-flood reports (USGS, NOAA).  In tandem with these case studies, we will review and discuss relevant classic and current scientific literature on flood hydrometeorology, hydroclimatology, extreme precipitation events, and flooding & climate change.  The semester will also include readings and discussion on the policy and planning implications that emerge from this physically based, climate-linked understanding of the underlying causes of flooding variability. To critically evaluate and apply the knowledge gained, 3-unit participants will complete an individual or  class project,  such as the analysis of a selected watershed’s flood history to assess past, present, and (projected) future climate-related drivers of its floods, a study of the Rillito watershed decades after the 1983 and 1993 floods, a group publication manuscript, etc. Project options will be discussed and agreed upon in class.

 


2015 Syllabus  [ pdf ]


TENTATIVE CLASS SCHEDULE
with Some Proposed Readings

Useful links:     USGS Publication Warehouse           NOAA US Daily Weather Maps Project

 

Dates with *  - an alternative day, time and/or location may be set up for these dates, agreeable to all

 

Wk

DATE

TOPIC / CLASS ACTIVITY

READING LIST

 

FLOOD GENERATING PROCESSES

1

Jan 20

Overview of Course

Be ready to discuss the readings on
the corresponding class date. 

2

Jan 27

Flood Hydroclimatology,
Scale & Climate Change 

KKH presentation & discussion

3

Feb 3

Paleoflood Hydrology
and Extreme Events:
Engineering and Natural Science Perspectives

VRB presentation & discussion

4

   Feb 10

Flash Flood Hydrometeorology

Bob Maddox presentation & discussion

5 Feb 17

Flood case study selections this week, after an overview and suggestions by KKH & VRB

A Framework for Talking about Causes of Floods

KKH  presentation

SOME FLOOD RESOURCES:

 

                                                 FLOOD CASE STUDIES
             Guidelines for Case Study Presentations                Case Study Reference List 
     

6

Feb 24

The 2013 Uttarakhand
Flash Flood, India (Raj)
The Great Flood of 1993 (Derek)

Raj & Derek

7

Mar 3

The 1977 Johnstown Flood (Susan)
The 1953 North Sea Flood (Roy)

Roy & Susan

8

   Mar 10

The 1983 Flooding of the Upper
Colorado River Basin
(Becky)
The 2006 Floods of
El Paso -Ciudad-Juárez
 (Diana)

Becky & Diana

 

Mar 17

SPRING BREAK - NO CLASSES THIS WEEK

9

Mar 24

The Dec 2001 Chehalis River Flood, Washington State  (Devon)

Devon

 

"TESTING THE CONVENTIONAL WISDOM"
PAST & PRESENT & FUTURE FLOODING:   EXTREMES   /  TRENDS / CLIMATE CHANGE

10

Mar 31

Discussion of Trend Papers

see Flood Trends REFERENCE LIST

11

Apr 7

Discussion of Trend Papers (cont.)

as assigned

 

FLOOD FREQUENCY ANALYSIS & SCIENCE / POLICY & PLANNING IMPLICATIONS

12

Apr 14

Discussion of FFA, Science, Policy & Planning Papers

See Flood Science, Policy & Planning REFERENCE LIST

13

Apr 21

[ AAG meeting ]

work on projects this week

14

Apr 28

Guest presentation: “Climate Information for Disaster Manage-ment: Bridging the Weather and Climate Timescales” (Mike Crimmins, Zack Guido, & Alison Meadow )

Read brochure describing the CLIMAS
Hydroclimate Dashboard Project

15

 May 5 

 Class Finale w/ dinner 
& "Wrap Up" discussion

Exam Period May 7 - May 13 Research papers due anytime
during this period
Research Paper Guidelines



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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