Da. Cenderelli et Ee. Wohl, Peak discharge estimates of glacial-lake outburst floods and "normal" climatic floods in the Mount Everest region, Nepal, GEOMORPHOLO, 40(1-2), 2001, pp. 57-90
Glacial-lake outburst floods (GLOFs) in the Mount Everest region of Nepal o
n 3 September 1977 and 4 August 1985 dramatically modified channels and val
leys in the region by eroding, transporting, and depositing large quantitie
s of sediment for tens of kilometers along their flood routes. Prior to thi
s research, the GLOF discharges had not been determined and the hydrology o
f "normal" climatic floods (SHFFs: seasonal high flow floods) was not known
. A one-dimensional step-backwater flow model was utilized, in conjunction
with paleostage indicators, to estimate the peak discharges of the GLOFs an
d SHFFs and to reconstruct the hydrology and hydraulic conditions of the GL
OFs at 10 reaches and SHFFs at 18 reaches. The most reliable GLOF and SHFF
peak discharge estimates were upstream from constrictions where there was c
ritical-depth control.
The peak discharge of the 1977 GLOF at 8.6 km from the breached moraine was
approximately 1900 m(3)/s. At 7.1 km downstream from the breached moraine,
the 1985 GLOF discharge was estimated at 2350 m(3)/s. At 27 km downstream
from the breached moraine, the 1985 GLOF attenuated to an estimated dischar
ge of 1375 m(3)/s. The peak discharges of SHFFs ranged from 7 to 205 m(3)/s
and were positively correlated with increasing drainage area. The GLOF dis
charges were 7 to 60 times greater than the SHFF discharges with the greate
st ratios occurring near the breached moraines. The downstream decline in t
he ratio between the GLOF discharge and SHFF discharge is the result of the
downstream attenuation of the GLOF and the increased discharge of the SHFF
because of increased contributing drainage area and the increased effects
of monsoonal precipitation at lower elevations. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science B
.V. All rights reserved.