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    • Hydrology and Water Resources in Arizona and the Southwest, Volume 02 (1972)
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    A Proposed Model for Flood Routing in Abstracting Ephemeral Channels

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    Author
    Lane, Leonard J.
    Affiliation
    Soil and Water Conservation Research Division, Agricultural Research Service, USDA
    Arizona Agricultural Experiment Station, Tucson, Arizona
    Southwest Watershed Research Center, Tucson, Arizona 85705
    Issue Date
    1972-05-06
    Keywords
    Hydrology -- Arizona.
    Water resources development -- Arizona.
    Hydrology -- Southwestern states.
    Water resources development -- Southwestern states.
    Model studies
    Flood routing
    Flood forecasting
    Ephemeral streams
    Rainfall disposition
    Rainfall-runoff relationships
    Watershed management
    Range management
    Thunderstorms
    Rainfall
    Streamflow
    Vegetation
    Groundwater recharge
    Bank storage
    Rates
    Storage
    Arizona
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    Copyright ©, where appropriate, is held by the author.
    Collection Information
    This article is part of the Hydrology and Water Resources in Arizona and the Southwest collections. Digital access to this material is made possible by the Arizona-Nevada Academy of Science and the University of Arizona Libraries. For more information about items in this collection, contact anashydrology@gmail.com.
    Publisher
    Arizona-Nevada Academy of Science
    Journal
    Hydrology and Water Resources in Arizona and the Southwest
    Abstract
    Almost all runoff from semiarid rangeland watersheds in southern Arizona results from intense highly variable thunderstorm rainfall. Abstractions, or transmission losses, are important in diminishing streamflow, supporting riparian vegetation and providing natural groundwater recharge. A flood routing procedure is developed using data from the walnut gulch experimental watershed, where flood movement and transmission losses are represented by a system using storage in the channel reach as a state variable which determines loss rates. Abstractions are computed as a cascade of general components in linear form. Wide variation in the parameters of this linear model with increasing inflow indicates that a linear relation between losses and storage is probably incorrect for ephemeral channels.
    ISSN
    0272-6106
    Collections
    Hydrology and Water Resources in Arizona and the Southwest, Volume 02 (1972)

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