The Swiss plate geophone is a bed load surrogate monitoring system that had been calibrated in several gravel bed streams through field calibration measurements. Field calibration measurements are generally expensive and time consuming, therefore we investigated the possibility to replace it by a flume‐based calibration approach. We applied impulse‐diameter relations for the Swiss plate geophone obtained from systematic flume experiments to field calibration measurements in four different gravel bed streams. The flume‐based relations were successfully validated with direct bed load samples from field measurements, by estimating the number of impulses based on observed bed load masses per grain‐size class. We estimated bed load transport mass by developing flume‐based and stream‐dependent calibration procedures for the Swiss plate geophone system using an additional empirical function. The estimated masses are on average in the range of ±90% of measured bed load masses in the field, but the accuracy is generally improved for larger transported bed load masses. We discuss the limitations of the presented flume‐based calibration approach.
In the spring of 1818, ice avalanches from the Giétro Glacier created an ice dam, which in turn formed a glacial lake in the Drance Valley (Canton of Valais, Switzerland). Today, its maximum volume is estimated to have been 25×106 m3. Cantonal authorities commissioned an engineer named Ignaz Venetz to mitigate the risk of the ice dam's failure. He supervised the construction of a tunnel through which a large volume of water was drained as the lake rose (9×106 m3 according to his estimates and 11×106 m3 according to our model). After 2.5 days of slow drainage, the ice dam failed on 16 June 1818 and caused major flooding in the Drance Valley up to 40 km downstream, resulting in about 40 deaths. Venetz's lake monitoring notes, numerous testimonies gathered in the disaster's aftermath, and our field survey have made it possible to collect a wealth of information on this event, which is one of the world's major documented glacial lake outburst floods. Reconstructing major outburst floods remains challenging because not only do they involve enormous volumes of water spreading over long distances but they are also associated with additional physical processes such as massive erosion; intense transport of ice, sediment, and debris; and damage to vegetation and buildings. This paper attempts to reconstruct the 1818 Giétro flood by focusing on its water component. We develop a simple model to estimate the initial hydrograph during the slow drainage and failure phases. The flood's features are deduced by solving the shallow‐water equations numerically. The computational framework involves six free parameters, of which five are constrained by physical considerations. Using iterative manual parameter adjustments, we matched the numerical simulations to the historical data. We found that the peak discharge was close to 14,500 m3/s, the flood's front velocity was about 6 m/s, and flow depth varied considerably along the River Drance's bed (from 30 m just downstream of the ice dam to 2 m on the alluvial fan, 24 km west of the dam). To achieve a good agreement between computations and historical data, we had to select a high value for the Manning friction coefficient n (with n as large as 0.08 s/m1/3). As the Drance Valley is narrow, high flow resistance caused the flood's leading edge to behave like a plug, moving at a fairly constant velocity, with little dependence on what happened behind it. This result may explain why a simple flood routing model is able to reproduce the flood's features, because in an Alpine valley, a lateral spreading of the water volume is limited.
Abstract. Debris flows consist of a mixture of water and sediments of various sizes. Apart from few exceptions, the water is usually contributed directly from precipitation. In a high mountain environment like the Alps, it appears necessary to consider infiltration of water into the ground during rainfall events, the runoff characteristics and the potential supply of sediment as a function of a multitude of climatic and hydrogeological factors. This paper outlines several new processes -either linked to ice formation in the ground before an event, or to the presence of snow avalanche deposits -that change the probability of observing an event.These processes were identified during field observations connected with extreme weather events that occurred recently in the Valais Alps (south-western Switzerland): they can be seen as factors either amplifying or reducing the potential of slope instability caused by the precipitation event. An intense freezing of the ground during the week preceding the exceptional rainfall event in mid-October 2000 amplified the probability of triggering debris flows between roughly 1800 and 2300 m asl. Both growth of ice needles and superficial ground freezing destroyed soil aggregates (increasing the availability of sediments) and/or, a deeper ground freezing resulted in decreased infiltration rate (increased runoff) during the first hours of heavy rainfall. The presence of snow avalanche deposits in a gully could be simultaneously an amplifying factor (the snow deposits increase the base flow and create a sliding plane for the sediments, mainly at the time of summer storms) or a reducing factor (reduction in the impact energy of the raindrops, mainly at the time of winter storms) of the risk of triggering debris flows.If it is not currently possible to establish rainfall threshold values for debris flow triggering, the knowledge and the implementation of these processes in the analysis of the potential triggering (for example by comparing the catchment hypsometric curve with the meteo-climatic situation) would nevertheless make the analysis of debris flows and forecasting more efficient.
Weathering affects joint or fault gougematerial in the Swiss Alps, leading to the formation of smectite, which changes the mechanical properties of fault gouge and degrades slope performance. Analysis of recent rockslides in gneissic rocks in Switzerland indicates that accelerations of movements are linked to precipitation, without the development of excess pore water pressure. Processes such as weathering and crushing induce soil-like behaviour of the infilling material and explain rockslide movements induced by water seepage in both fault and joint gouges.
The assessment of sediment transfer processes is necessary to understand the hydro-geomorphological functioning of small alpine watersheds prone to channelised debris flows because their occurrence often depends on the amount of debris available in the gully systems. Therefore, sediment budgets should be studied through the identification of erosion, transport and deposition processes. Sediment transfer processes were investigated in a small catchment by field measurements and, more specifically, through the application of a process-based geomorphological mapping method. The proposed methodology is based on data directly derived from GIS analysis using high-resolution DEM, field measurements and aerial photograph interpretations. It has been conceived to estimate sediment transfer dynamics, taking into account the role of different sediment stores in the torrential system. The proposed geomorphological mapping methodology is quite innovative in comparison with most legend systems that are not adequate for mapping comprehensively active and complex geomorphological systems such as debris-flow catchments. Maps representing the various sediment storages and their relationships can be used for hydro-geomorphological hazard mitigation.
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