Late Holocene flood magnitudes in the Lower Rhine river valley and upper delta resolved by a two‐dimensional hydraulic modelling approach
van der Meulen, B.; Bomers, A.; Cohen, K.M.; Middelkoop, H.
(2021) Earth Surface Processes and Landforms, volume 46, issue 4, pp. 853 - 868
(Article)
Abstract
Palaeoflood hydraulic modelling is essential for quantifying ‘millennial flood’ events not covered in the instrumental record. Palaeoflood modelling research has largely focused on one-dimensional analysis for geomorphologically stable fluvial settings because two-dimensional analysis for dynamic alluvial settings is time consuming and requires a detailed representation of the past landscape. In
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this study, we make the step to spatially continuous palaeoflood modelling for a large and dynamic lowland area. We applied advanced hydraulic model simulations (1D–2D coupled set-up in HEC-RAS with 950 channel sections and 108 × 10 3 floodplain grid cells) to quantify the extent and magnitude of past floods in the Lower Rhine river valley and upper delta. As input, we used a high-resolution terrain reconstruction (palaeo-DEM) of the area in early mediaeval times, complemented with hydraulic roughness values. After conducting a series of model runs with increasing discharge magnitudes at the upstream boundary, we compared the simulated flood water levels with an inventory of exceeded and non-exceeded elevations extracted from various geological, archaeological and historical sources. This comparison demonstrated a Lower Rhine millennial flood magnitude of approximately 14,000 m 3/s for the Late Holocene period before late mediaeval times. This value exceeds the largest measured discharges in the instrumental record, but not the design discharges currently accounted for in flood risk management.
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Keywords: Lower Rhine, Rhine delta, hydraulic model, millennial flood, palaeohydrology, Geography, Planning and Development, Earth-Surface Processes, Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)
ISSN: 0197-9337
Publisher: Wiley Online Library
Note: Funding Information: This work is part of the research programme ?Floods of the Past, Design for the Future? with project number 14506, which is financed by the Dutch Research Council (NWO). We presented earlier versions of our results at FLAG 2018, Li?ge, and INQUA 2019, Dublin, and we thank everyone with whom we discussed our research following the talks at these conferences. In October 2019, we presented our results for a mixed Dutch and German audience at the Ministry for Infrastructure and Water Management of the Netherlands (Rijkswaterstaat, Arnhem), where we had useful exchanges with river managers from both countries. We thank Marjolein Gouw-Bouman for discussions on past vegetation patterns in the study area, which helped us to determine roughness classes and values. For general input and discussions on past floods of the Lower Rhine river, we thank Willem Toonen, J?rgen Herget, Roy Dierx, Ralph Schielen and Suzanne Hulscher. Two anonymous reviewers and the ESPL editor are thanked for their constructive commentary. Publisher Copyright: © 2021 The Authors. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
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