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Floods and floodplain changes of the River Morava, the Strážnické Pomoraví region (Czech Republic) over the past 130 years

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    0367502 - ÚACH 2012 RIV GB eng J - Journal Article
    Brázdil, R. - Máčka, Z. - Řezníčková, L. - Soukalová, E. - Dobrovolný, P. - Grygar, Tomáš
    Floods and floodplain changes of the River Morava, the Strážnické Pomoraví region (Czech Republic) over the past 130 years.
    Hydrological Sciences Journal. Roč. 56, č. 7 (2011), s. 1166-1185. ISSN 0262-6667. E-ISSN 2150-3435
    R&D Projects: GA AV ČR IAAX00130801
    Institutional research plan: CEZ:AV0Z40320502
    Keywords : flood * floodplain change * channel change * anabranching system * Strážnické Pomoraví * River Morava
    Subject RIV: DA - Hydrology ; Limnology
    Impact factor: 1.541, year: 2011

    The development of the River Morava floodplain has been influenced by several natural and anthropogenic factors. This paper focuses on variations in flood activity and channel changes of the River Morava in the region of Strážnické Pomoraví (southeastern Czech Republic). Floods are analysed in terms of measured peak water stages, Hk (Rohatec, 1886-1920) and peak discharges Qk (Rohatec/Strážnice, 1921-2010) evaluated with respect to their N-year return period (HN or QN). The frequency of floods with Qk ? Q2 reaches a significant maximum in March, followed by July. According to flood series compiled from 1881 onwards, their frequency peaked in the 1961-1970 decade with the most severe events occurring in July 1997 (Q100), March 2006 and June 2010 (Q50). During the study period the natural dynamics of the original anabranching channel patterns were significantly modified by human intervention, such as the abandonment of some anabranching channels, channel straightening, enlargement of the main channel, flood-dike construction, and the creation of the Bat'a shipping channel. These changes resulted in decreased frequency and a reduction in the extent of floodplain inundations compared to the period prior to channel modifications in the 1930s.
    Permanent Link: http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0202158

     
     
Number of the records: 1  

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