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5th Swiss Geoscience Meeting, Geneva 2007 Can automatically derived maps of Dominant Runoff Processes explain the magnitude of flood runoff in August 2005? Michael Margreth*, Felix Naef** * Institut für Umweltingenieurwissenschaften, ETH Zürich, ETH Hönggerberg, CH-8093 Zürich ([email protected]) **Institut für Umweltingenieurwissenschaften, ETH Zürich, ETH Hönggerberg, CH-8093 Zürich ([email protected]) In August 2005, many alpine catchments had an extreme flood. In spite of the enormous amount of precipitation, the specific runoff of many steep catchments was surprisingly low. Obviously, in these catchments a large part of the rain could be stored for a short term. After saturation of these storage volumes, runoff increased strongly. Can delayed reacting alpine catchments, susceptible to this threshold behaviour be identified automatically in a GIS? When are the large storage volumes exhausted? To identify areas with large storage volumes, maps of dominant runoff processes (DRP) are required. The decision scheme to determine the DRP from Scherrer and Naef (2003) was implemented in a GIS, using high resolution data of soils, geology, land use and topography (Schmocker-Fackel et al., 2007) and applied successfully for the area of Kt Zurich (1730m2), covering a wide range of topography, geology and flood producing precipitation regimes (Naef et al., 2007). In alpine areas, high resolution soil maps are often not available. To identify delayed reacting steep alpine catchments, a DRP-map was produced automatically for 100 swiss catchments, applying the decision scheme mentioned above with low resolution geological and soil maps, available all over the country. In a more time consuming method, the required hydrological soil parameters like soil depth, grain size distribution and soil water regime were derived in a higher resolution from geological, land use and topographical information alone. This can be done with a reasonable accuracy in alpine catchments, where soil formation depends strongly on topography and geology (Margreth, 2004, Egli et al. 2004). This method was applied in the catchments of Lütschine, Schächen, Allenbach and Minster. Results of these different methods were compared and verified with manually derived process maps and soil profile samples. They can be used to explain the different reactions observed in these catchments and to get an idea about the reactions of the rivers, when the storage capacities are exceeded. REFERENCES Naef, F., Margreth, M., Schmocker-Fackel, P., Scherrer, S. (2007): Automatisch hergeleitete Abflussprozesskarten - ein neues Werkzeug zur Abschätzung von Hochwasserabflüssen. Wasser, Energie, Luft (in press). 5th Swiss Geoscience Meeting, Geneva 2007 Scherrer, S. and Naef, F. (2003): A decision scheme to identify dominant flow processes at the plot-scale for the evaluation of contributing areas at the catchment-scale. Hydrological processes, 17(2): 391-401 Schmocker-Fackel, P., Naef, F., Scherrer, S. (2007): Identifying runoff processes on the plot and catchment scale. Hydrology and Earth System Sciences. http://www.hydrol-earth-syst-sci.net/11/891/2007/hess-11-8912007.pdf Egli, M., Margreth, M., Vökt, U., Fitze, P., Tognina, G., Keller, F. (2005): Modellierung von Bodentypen und Bodeneigenschaften im Oberengadin (Schweiz) mit Hilfe eines Geographischen Informationssystems (GIS). Geographica Helvetica, 2. S. 87 – 96. Margreth, M. (2004): GIS- gestützte Modellierung der Bodentypen und anderen Bodeneigenschaften im Berninatal. Diplomarbeit am Geographischen Institut der Universität Zürich.