Rainfall Intensities for Southeastern Arizona
Publication: Journal of Irrigation and Drainage Engineering
Volume 114, Issue 1
Abstract
Small watershed storm runoff in the southwestern United States is dominated by intense, short-duration convective rains of limited areal extent. Most commonly, flood peak estimates are based on rainfall predictions found in the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Atlas 2, a precipitation-frequency atlas for the Western United States. Records of short-duration rainfall (5 to 30 min. duration) from a dense network of recording rain gauges in southeastern Arizona indicate that flood peaks based on NOAA Atlas 2 for less frequent events (50-yr. and 100-yr. frequencies) for small watersheds are underestimated.
Get full access to this article
View all available purchase options and get full access to this article.
References
1.
Hafstad, K. G. (1942). “Reliability of the station‐year rainfall frequency determinations.” Trans., ASCE, 107, 633–683.
2.
Hershfield, D. M. (1961). “Rainfall frequency atlas of the United States.” Tech. Paper No. 40, U.S. Weather Bureau, Washington, DC, May.
3.
Miller, J. F., Frederich, R. H., and Tracey, R. J. (1973). “Precipitation‐frequency atlas of the Western United States.” NOAA Atlas 2, Vol. 1–11, National Weather Service, Silver Spring, MD.
4.
Osborn, H. B. (1984). “Storm cell properties influencing runoff from small watersheds.” Transp. Res. Board, NRC, TRR 922, 24–32.
5.
Osborn, H. B., and Laursen, E. M. (1973). “Thunderstorm runoff in southeastern Arizona.” J. Hydraulics Div., ASCE, 99(7), 1129–1145.
6.
Petersen, M. M. (1986). “Short‐duration precipitation for Billings, Montana.” J. Hydraulics Div., ASCE, 112(11), 1089–1093.
7.
Reich, B. M. (1978). “Rainfall intensity‐duration‐frequency curves developed from (not by) computer output.” Transp. Res. Board, Washington, DC, NRC, TRR 685, 35–43.
8.
Reich, B. M., and Osborn, H. B. (1982). “Improving point rainfall prediction with experimental data.” Int. Statistical Analysis of Rainfall and Runoff. Int'l. Symp. on Rainfall/Runoff, Mississippi State Univ., Water Res. Publications, P.O. Box 2841, Littleton, CO, 41–54.
9.
Rovey, E. W., Woolhiser, D. A., and Smith, R. E. (1977). “A distributed kinematic model of upland watersheds.” Hydrology Paper 93, Colorado State University, Ft. Collins, CO.
10.
Smith, R. E. (1981). “A kinematic model for surface mine sediment yield.” Trans., ASAE, 24(6), 1508–1519.
Information & Authors
Information
Published In
Copyright
Copyright © 1988 ASCE.
History
Published online: Feb 1, 1988
Published in print: Feb 1988
Authors
Metrics & Citations
Metrics
Citations
Download citation
If you have the appropriate software installed, you can download article citation data to the citation manager of your choice. Simply select your manager software from the list below and click Download.