Abstract
This study evaluates flood risk factors and maps flood-prone areas in Jigawa State, Nigeria, using geospatial techniques. By integrating various flood-causing factors—such as rainfall distribution, elevation, slope, drainage network and density, land cover and use, flow accumulation, and soil type— through a multi-parametric approach, it employs the Analytical Hierarchy Process (AHP) to perform pairwise comparisons and assign priority weights to each factor. Spatial multi-criteria analysis (MCA) then ranks and identifies potential flood locations. Using ArcGIS's weighted overlay tool, these layers are combined to produce a final flood risk map, classifying areas into high, very high, moderate, low, and very low-risk categories. Elevation and slope were found to have the greatest impact on flooding, with normalized criterion weights of 30 and 22, respectively. The Consistency Ratio (CR) of 0.06 validated the strength of the judgment, and these AHP-derived factor weights were used to create the flood risk map showing areas with varying risk levels, highlighting eight local governments in the study area. —Auyo, Hadejia, Kirika-samma, Kafin-Hausa, Ringim, Miga, Jahun, and Dutse—compose areas of very high risk, while Guri, some portions of northern Kiri-kasamma, southern Jahun, northern Auyo, Birnin-Kudu, and northwestern Ringim local governments comprise high-risk areas. Areas of moderate risk comprise a small portion of northern Kirika-samma, larger portions of Gwaram, small portions of Jahun, Kafin-Hausa, Dutse and Birnin-kudu local governments respectively and areas of low to very low risks consist of many parts of Gwaram and some tiny portions of Birnin-kudu.
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