Title
Was the 2009 flood the most hazardous or the largest ever recorded in the Amazon?
Date Issued
15 June 2014
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Filizola N.
Latrubesse E.M.
Fraizy P.
Souza R.
Guimarães V.
Université de Toulouse
Publisher(s)
Elsevier
Abstract
Floods are fundamental components of Amazon nature and culture. The large flood of 2009, however, opened a new perspective on hazards and disasters in the Amazon basin. More than 238,000 residents from 38 municipalities were affected by floods along the Amazon River and lower reaches of its tributaries. Never before has a flood in the Amazon produced such a dramatic effect on the local population. The magnitude of the disaster suggested it was the largest recorded Amazon flood since the beginning of measurements in 1928 at Óbidos and that it could represent the largest recorded flood on Earth. A complex combination of atmospheric and hydrologic factors made the 2009 Amazon flood the most hazardous. It was the result of large scale and regional climatic events, non-typical mechanisms of flood transmission generating complex inter-relations in time and space between the main system and the tributaries, and recent urban growth of riverine cities without adequate planning. Our measurements at Óbidos, however, indicate that the 2009 flood was the highest recorded Amazon stage, but most likely not the largest water discharge. We propose as well that the magnitude of the Amazon floods at Óbidos has been overestimated for decades and that the available values of flood discharge have been a source of error for a multidisciplinary set of scientists developing climate and environmental modeling. © 2013 Elsevier B.V.
Start page
99
End page
105
Volume
215
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Oceanografía, Hidrología, Recursos hídricos Geología Meteorología y ciencias atmosféricas
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-84899914643
Source
Geomorphology
ISSN of the container
0169555X
Sponsor(s)
We thank the Brazilian Center of the Teresa Lozano Long Institute of Latin American Studies-LLILAS for providing support for Prof. Naziano Filizola's visit to the University of Texas at Austin. Part of this research was supported by a Mellon Grant provided to E.M. Latrubesse by LLILAS, UT Austin , REMETHI Project and IHESA/RHIA Project (both financed by FINEP-Brazil ) and by the PHIESAM and ORE-HYBAM project (France-Brazil collaboration). We also thank to Julio Ordoñez for habitually providing us SENAMHI hydrological and meteorological bulletins and to Josyane Ronchail and Jhan Carlo Espinoza for their comments about the manuscript.
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus