Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4393445 Journal of Arid Environments 2012 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

This research aims to analyze short duration rainfall data in arid regions, to propose design storm distributions representatives of the recorded storms. Frequency analyses were carried out on all storm durations. Design storm distributions are compared with published depth duration ratios or entire synthetic storm distributions such as the Bell ratios for less than 2-hour durations and ratio of 24-hour to 1-hour rainfall depths embedded in the Soil Conservation Service (SCS) type II storm distribution, known to be the most conservative among SCS distributions. Rainfall-runoff simulations were carried out to determine the impact of the use of storm distributions on generated peak dischargesIt was found that Bell ratios are adequate to represent rainfall patterns in arid regions for rainfall durations less than two hours. Furthermore, the SCS type II synthetic storm distribution can be safely used for rainfall stations where extreme storms last more than 3 h on the average. This is true for most of the studied locations. Nevertheless, a modified SCS design storm distribution is proposed to represent regions with more concentrated storms. Peak discharges calculated using the modified SCS storm distributions are equivalent or higher than those calculated using the entire Intensity-Duration-Frequency information.

► Analysis of short duration rainfall in arid regions proposing design distributions. ► Bell ratios adequate for rainfall in arid regions if durations less than 2 h. ► SCS type II distribution safe to use when extreme storms are more than 3 h. ► New SCS distribution is proposed to represent more concentrated storms.

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Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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