Abstract

A wide variety of processes controls the time of occurrence, duration, extent, and severity of river floods. Classifying flood events by their causative processes may assist in enhancing the accuracy of local and regional flood frequency estimates and support the detection and interpretation of any changes in flood occurrence and magnitudes. This paper provides a critical review of existing causative classifications of instrumental and preinstrumental series of flood events, discusses their validity and applications, and identifies opportunities for moving toward more comprehensive approaches. So far no unified definition of causative mechanisms of flood events exists. Existing frameworks for classification of instrumental and preinstrumental series of flood events adopt different perspectives: hydroclimatic (large‐scale circulation patterns and atmospheric state at the time of the event), hydrological (catchment scale precipitation patterns and antecedent catchment state), and hydrograph‐based (indirectly considering generating mechanisms through their effects on hydrograph characteristics). All of these approaches intend to capture the flood generating mechanisms and are useful for characterizing the flood processes at various spatial and temporal scales. However, uncertainty analyses with respect to indicators, classification methods, and data to assess the robustness of the classification are rarely performed which limits the transferability across different geographic regions. It is argued that more rigorous testing is needed. There are opportunities for extending classification methods to include indicators of space–time dynamics of rainfall, antecedent wetness, and routing effects, which will make the classification schemes even more useful for understanding and estimating floods.This article is categorized under:Science of Water > Water ExtremesScience of Water > Hydrological ProcessesScience of Water > Methods

Highlights

  • River flood events exhibit a wide variety of process controls that determine their time of occurrence, duration, extent, and severity

  • We review causative classifications of naturally occurring river floods and do not consider events caused by structure failures

  • We review existing causative classifications of river flood events according to these three perspectives

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Summary

Introduction

River flood events exhibit a wide variety of process controls that determine their time of occurrence, duration, extent, and severity. Generation mechanisms of river floods are not well defined at the catchment scale. The different generating mechanisms and characteristics of floods are usually ignored in statistical or comparative analyses. Analyzing floods that are caused by different processes may result in uncertain predictions of flood characteristics (Potter, 1958) and their possible changes (Hirschboeck, Ely, & Maddox, 2000). For this reason, it is of advantage to only consider events that exhibit similar traits when comparing river floods in different periods or catchments (Blöschl, Sivapalan, Wagener, Viglione, & Savenije, 2013)

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