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Jacobs, L., Maes, J., Mertens, K., Sekajugo, J., Thiery, W., van Lipzig, N., Poesen, J., Kervyn, M. & Dewitte , O. 2016. ‘Reconstruction of a flash flood event through a multi-hazard approach: focus on the Rwenzori Mountains, Uganda’. Natural Hazards 84. DOI: 10.1007/s11069-016-2458-y. I.F. 1.746.
Article in a scientific Journal / Article in a Journal
The increased use of complex and holistic modelling for multi-hazard analysis is in
sharp contrast with a lacuna in hazard analysis in equatorial Africa. This study aims to increase
understanding of multi-hazard events in poorly documented regions with low accessibility. We
focus on the Nyamwamba catchment (107 km2
) located in the Rwenzori Mountains (Uganda)
where on May 1, 2013, a severe flash flood occurred. In this region, wildfires, earthquakes and
landslides occur as well. Here we reconstruct the circumstances under which this flash flood
event was triggered, characterize the different processes acting upon the catchment dynamics
and estimate the damaging effects of the flash flood within the catchment. The combined
occurrence of intense rainfall, a forest fire having burned 18 % of the catchment area and the
occurrence of 29 landslides providing debris to the river system, induced a debris-rich and very
destructive flash flood which caused several fatalities, the destruction of 70 buildings, several
bridges, a hospital, a school, a tarmac road and several lifelines. Although the methodologies
applied to estimate peak discharge, detect landslides and delineate wildfires are well established
in their disciplines and sometimes limited in their precision, their combination is
required to demonstrate the importance of the wildfire and landslides for the magnitude of this
flood, unprecedented in decades but characterized by a low return period of the triggering
rainfall event. This indicates that flash floods should not be considered as self-determined
phenomena but as a result of several cascading and interacting hazard processes.