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Abstract(1)

The point rainfall model presented extends previous work on event-based rainfall models and overcomes some of their shortcomings. The model uses event-based data and can be calibrated using rainfall data substantially affected by missing or corrupted values. Particular attention was given to adequately simulating extreme storm rainfall events for use in hydrological risk assessment. The model is capable of simulating the inter-event time, storm duration, average event intensity and intra-event temporal characteristics. Conditioning of the average event rainfall intensity on rainfall duration and time of year is a feature of the model. Rainfall events are disaggregated using a conditional random walk on a dimensionless mass curve. Pluviograph data in 6 min increments from three Australian capital cities (Sydney, Brisbane and Melbourne) was used to calibrate the model parameters. It was found that the constrained random walk parameters were almost identical for the three cities. The model was tested using statistics not used in its calibration and the simulated intensityfrequencyduration extreme rainfall statistics compared very favorably with observed values. In addition, simulated aggregated statistics compared favorably with observed statistics from 30 min to monthly durations. The simulated annual rainfalls significantly underestimated the observed variability for Brisbane and Sydney, whereas satisfactorily reproduced the Melbourne variability. An explanation is offered for these differences.
a, b c

Theresa M Heneker

, Martin F Lambert , George Kuczera

Article - selected
Figures/Tables (18)

Figures/Tables (18)- selected


References (34)

References (34)- selected


Journal of Hydrology Volume 247, Issues 1-2, 15 June 2001, Pages 54-71

doi:10.1016/S0022-1694(01)00361-4 | How to Cite or Link Using DOI

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A point rainfall mo

A point rainfall model for risk-based design


ABSTRACT(2): Recent occurrences of heavy rainfall in New Orleans, Louisiana, have led to speculation that the local heavy rainfall regime has changed. To objectively determine the validity of these speculations, changing magnitudes of storm rainfall were investigated through an examination of the annual maximum storm series from 1871 to 1991 at the New Federal site. Although a long-term trend was not found, the Wilcoxon test indicated that magnitudes during the last 14 years (from 19781991) differed significantly from the rest of the series.

TEMPORAL FLUCTUATIONS OF HEAVY RAINFALL MAGNITUDES IN NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: 18711991


1. Barry D. Keim, 2. Robert A. Muller Article first published online: 8 JUN 2007 DOI: 10.1111/j.1752-1688.1992.tb01494.x

JAWRA Journal of the American Water Resources Association


Volume 28, Issue 4, pages 721730, August 1992

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