TY - JOUR
T1 - Estimating Floodwater Depths from Flood Inundation Maps and Topography
AU - Cohen, Sagy
AU - Brakenridge, G. Robert
AU - Kettner, Albert
AU - Bates, Bradford
AU - Nelson, Jonathan
AU - McDonald, Richard
AU - Huang, Yu Fen
AU - Munasinghe, Dinuke
AU - Zhang, Jiaqi
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 American Water Resources Association
PY - 2018/8/1
Y1 - 2018/8/1
N2 - Information on flood inundation extent is important for understanding societal exposure, water storage volumes, flood wave attenuation, future flood hazard, and other variables. A number of organizations now provide flood inundation maps based on satellite remote sensing. These data products can efficiently and accurately provide the areal extent of a flood event, but do not provide floodwater depth, an important attribute for first responders and damage assessment. Here we present a new methodology and a GIS-based tool, the Floodwater Depth Estimation Tool (FwDET), for estimating floodwater depth based solely on an inundation map and a digital elevation model (DEM). We compare the FwDET results against water depth maps derived from hydraulic simulation of two flood events, a large-scale event for which we use medium resolution input layer (10 m) and a small-scale event for which we use a high-resolution (LiDAR; 1 m) input. Further testing is performed for two inundation maps with a number of challenging features that include a narrow valley, a large reservoir, and an urban setting. The results show FwDET can accurately calculate floodwater depth for diverse flooding scenarios but also leads to considerable bias in locations where the inundation extent does not align well with the DEM. In these locations, manual adjustment or higher spatial resolution input is required.
AB - Information on flood inundation extent is important for understanding societal exposure, water storage volumes, flood wave attenuation, future flood hazard, and other variables. A number of organizations now provide flood inundation maps based on satellite remote sensing. These data products can efficiently and accurately provide the areal extent of a flood event, but do not provide floodwater depth, an important attribute for first responders and damage assessment. Here we present a new methodology and a GIS-based tool, the Floodwater Depth Estimation Tool (FwDET), for estimating floodwater depth based solely on an inundation map and a digital elevation model (DEM). We compare the FwDET results against water depth maps derived from hydraulic simulation of two flood events, a large-scale event for which we use medium resolution input layer (10 m) and a small-scale event for which we use a high-resolution (LiDAR; 1 m) input. Further testing is performed for two inundation maps with a number of challenging features that include a narrow valley, a large reservoir, and an urban setting. The results show FwDET can accurately calculate floodwater depth for diverse flooding scenarios but also leads to considerable bias in locations where the inundation extent does not align well with the DEM. In these locations, manual adjustment or higher spatial resolution input is required.
KW - flood inundation
KW - flooding
KW - remote sensing
KW - water depth
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85034237226&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/1752-1688.12609
DO - 10.1111/1752-1688.12609
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85034237226
SN - 1093-474X
VL - 54
SP - 847
EP - 858
JO - Journal of the American Water Resources Association
JF - Journal of the American Water Resources Association
IS - 4
ER -