Palaeoflood records to assist in design of civil infrastructure in ephemeral rivers with scarce hydrological data: Ugab River, Namibia

G. Cloete, G. Benito, T. Grodek, N. Porat, J. Hoffman, Y. Enzel

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

Study region: A flood study was performed in the ephemeral Ugab River in the arid north-western part of Namibia. The headwaters of the river lie on the higher Namibian plateau, where most floods are generated and propagate west, through the Namib desert, to the Atlantic Ocean. Study focus: Estimation of a 1 % Annual Exceedance Probability (AEP) flood is required for upgrading of road infrastructure. In compliance with revised road standards, the existing Ugab River bridge needs to accommodate the 1 % flood or be replaced at a high cost. From hydraulic modelling it was determined that the bridge can accommodate a ∼2000 m3s–1 flood. The Regional Maximum Flood model estimates the 1 % flood at ∼3600 m3s–1 while a Flood Frequency Analysis (FFA), based on short term systematic data, predicts the flood at ∼550 m3s–1. This inconsistency needed to be resolved. Incorporation of palaeoflood discharges (14 floods over the last 1260 years) into the FFA produced a 1 % flood of ∼820 m3s–1, indicating that the existing bridge has sufficient flood capacity. New hydrological insights for the region: This study shows that palaeoflood hydrology improves conventional hydrological methods in dryland regions, providing long-term registers for reliable estimation of FFA. This is especially applicable to regions with complex hydrology or with scarce gauged discharges, or where data is simply unavailable.

Original languageEnglish
Article number101263
JournalJournal of Hydrology: Regional Studies
Volume44
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2022
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2022

Funding

The authors wish to thank the Roads Authority of Namibia for funding the palaeoflood study on the proposed MR 76 road upgrade-project, and for support from the road project consultants, Windhoek Consulting Engineers in joint venture with Knight Piésold Consulting. The Geological Survey of Israel Laboratory provided the OSL dates. The layout map in Fig. 1 was produced by Mr Sebastian Jahnke. The authors wish to thank the Roads Authority of Namibia for funding the palaeoflood study on the proposed MR 76 road upgrade-project, and for support from the road project consultants, Windhoek Consulting Engineers in joint venture with Knight Piésold Consulting. The Geological Survey of Israel Laboratory provided the OSL dates. The layout map in Fig. 1 was produced by Mr Sebastian Jahnke.

FundersFunder number
Geological Survey of Israel Laboratory
Roads Authority of Namibia

    Keywords

    • Ephemeral rivers
    • Hydraulics
    • Hydrology
    • Infrastructure
    • Palaeoflood
    • Scarce data

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