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WeatherMore |
River floods
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Urban flood |
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Flash flood |
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The most common floods are the river floods. |
The effects of forestry to increase flooding could be quite large. Deforestation causes higher surface runoff, consequential soil erosion and therefore reduced water storage capacity. Landuse and infrastructure are important factors responsible for the increase in peak water levels and frequency of high runoff peaks. |
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Short-term modification of river flood behaviour is agreed to occur due to the human activity associated with forestry such as ploughing and drainage, road construction and compaction of soils. Also, despite the debatable influence of deforestation, tree planting remains a suggested remediation technique of flood effects. Every alteration in the pattern of agricultural production can be shown to modify flood occurrence and the ploughing up of former extensive grasslands is said to have increased the flood potential of some river basins. Removal of vegetation, or conversion to plants with lower evapotranspiration and interception, increases run-off volumes and lowers storage. In the future, the actual report of the Intergovermental Panel of Climate Change (IPCC) projects for the 21st century, that because of the more intense precipitation events (which is very likely), the increasing of the flood, landslide, avalanche and mudslide damages are expected. |
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But the ’flood of the century’ was on Elbe in 2002. In parts of the Erzgebirge (mountain range between Germany/Saxony and Czech Republic) more than 300 mm fell in one day. The extreme precipitation was followed by a very quick rise in the water levels of the Elbe tributaries, in particular the rivers, which drain the Erzgebirge to the north. The water level of the Elbe subsequently reached a maximum mark, which had not been recorded for centuries. The total economic damages resulting from the August flood (the Czech Republic: € 3 billion, Austria: € 3 billion; Germany: € 9.2 billion) represent a new European record for flood damages.
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6. The flooding of the Elbe near Elster (left) and the flooded streets of Meissen (right),
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Compiled by Sándor Szalai - Hungarian Meteorological Service
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