Hiromichi MORIIKE, Yuichi ONDA, Maki TSUJIMURA, Shigeo HORIUCHI,Jyunichi AKANUMA and Masatomi KARAKI
Abstract
To determine the appropriate long]term rainfall index for warning and evacuation
from debris disaster, runoff monitoring of multi]scale nested catchments (headwater
streams, 4 to 6 km2 catchments, and a 70 km2 catchment) have been conducted
in the upstream of Kamanashi River, central Japan. Using stream discharge peak
and recession curve, the relationship among basin scale, underlying geology
and runoff response were evaluated. The suitable long]term rainfall index was
determined by comparing stream recession curve and the effective rainfall with
different half life period. The recession analysis of stream flow revealed that
stream recession insensitive to catchment size but controlled by underlying
geology. The half]life time of the estimated effective rainfall was 48 hours
in granite, 72 hours in a sedimentary rock, 168 hours in limestone. The estimated
half life period using the area ratio of catchment geology also show good agreement
to the actual recession data. These finding suggest that runoff monitoring for
square km scale is encouraged, and determining appropriate half life of each
geology is important for future warning and evacuation plan.
Key wordsFRainfall runoff characteristics, Long]term precipitation index, Effective
rainfall, Half life period