Hydrologic conditions and terrestrial laser scanning of post-firedebris flows in the san gabriel mountains, CA, U.S.A

Authors

  • K.M. Schmidt United States Geological Survey, Menlo Park, California, USA
  • M.N. Hanshaw United States Geological Survey, Menlo Park, California, USA
  • J.F. Howle United States Geological Survey, Carnelian Bay, CA, USA
  • J.W. Kean United States Geological Survey, Denver Federal Center, Denver (CO), USA https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3089-0369
  • D.M. Staley United StatesGeological Survey, Denver Federal Center, Denver (CO), USA https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2239-3402
  • J.D. Stock United States Geological Survey, Menlo Park, California, USA
  • W. Bawdeng United States Geological Survey, Sacramento, USA

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.4408/IJEGE.2011-03.B-064

Keywords:

rainfall-runoff, debris flow, rainfall threshold, terrestrial laser scanning, lidar, wildfire, warning system

Abstract

To investigate rainfall-runoff conditions that generate post-wildfire debris flows, we instrumented and surveyed steep, small watersheds along the tectonically active front of the San Gabriel Mountains, California. Fortuitously, we recorded runoff-generated debris-flows triggered by one spatially restricted convective event with 28 mm of rainfall falling over 62 minutes. Our rain gages, nested hillslope overland-flow sensors and soil-moisture probes, as well as a time series of terrestrial laser scanning (TLS) revealed the effects of the storm. Hillslope overland-flow response, along two ~10-m long flow lines perpendicular to and originating from a drainage divide, displayed only a 10 to 20 minute delay from the onset of rainfall with accumulated totals of merely 5-10 mm. Depth-stratified soil-moisture probes displayed a greater time delay, roughly 20- 30 minutes, indicating that initial overland flow was Hortonian. Furthermore, a downstream channel-monitoring array recorded a pronounced discharge peak generated by the passage of a debris flow after 18 minutes of rainfall. At this time, only four of the eleven hillslope overland flow sensors confirmed the presence of surface-water flow. Repeat TLS and detailed field mapping using GPS document how patterns of rainsplash, overland-flow scour, and rilling contributed to the generation of metter-scale debris flows. In response to a single small storm, the debris flows deposited irregular levees and lobate terminal snouts on hillslopes and caused wide- spread erosion of the valley axis with ground surface lowering exceeding 1.5 m.

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Published

2011-11-30

How to Cite

Schmidt, K., Hanshaw, M., Howle, J., Kean, J., Staley, D., Stock, J., & Bawdeng, W. (2011). Hydrologic conditions and terrestrial laser scanning of post-firedebris flows in the san gabriel mountains, CA, U.S.A. Italian Journal of Engineering Geology and Environment, 583–593. https://doi.org/10.4408/IJEGE.2011-03.B-064