Geophysical Research Letters (Jun 2024)

Peak Flow Event Durations in the Mississippi River Basin and Implications for Temporal Sampling of Rivers

  • Arnaud Cerbelaud,
  • Cédric H. David,
  • Sylvain Biancamaria,
  • Jeffrey Wade,
  • Manu Tom,
  • Renato Prata de Moraes Frasson,
  • Denis Blumstein

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1029/2024GL109220
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 51, no. 11
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract The impact of an episodic river flood is intimately linked to its duration. Yet it is still unclear how often should a river be observed to accurately determine the occurrence and duration of extreme events. Here we assess flow statistics along with peak flow event detection and duration as a function of the discharge sampling period for large tributaries of the Mississippi basin using hourly gages over 2010–2022. Median event durations above high quantiles spatially vary from around 2 days upstream to 30 days downstream. Discharge mean, standard deviation, and quantiles can all be estimated within 2.5% error for sampling periods up to 8 days. A minimum temporal sampling 4× (2×) finer than peak flow event median duration is required to detect 95 ± 3% (85 ± 5%) of events and to estimate their duration within 90 ± 5% (75 ± 10%) median accuracy. Our findings have direct implications for future satellite missions concerned with capturing flood events.

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