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Historical hydrology for studying flood risk in Europe

312

Citations

62

References

2006

Year

Abstract

Historical hydrology can be defined as a research field occupying the interface between hydrology and history, with the objectives: to reconstruct temporal and spatial patterns of river flow and, in particular, extreme events (floods, ice phenomena, hydrological droughts) mainly for the period prior to the creation of national hydrological networks; and to investigate the vulnerability of past societies and economies to extreme hydrological events.It is a significant tool for the study of flood risk.Basic sources of documentary data on floods and methods of data collection and analysis are discussed.Research progress achieved in Europe in reconstructing past runoff conditions, hydrological and hydraulic analyses of historical floods, their meteorological causes, impacts and relation to climate change, as well as use of combined series of palaeofloods, instrumental and historical floods for reconstructing long-term flood records, is reviewed.Finally, the future research needs of historical hydrology are discussed.

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