single-dr.php

JDR Vol.14 No.9 pp. 1227-1235
(2019)
doi: 10.20965/jdr.2019.p1227

Paper:

Rainfall Indices at Estimated Occurrence Times of Sediment Disasters Triggered by the July 2018 Heavy Rainfall

Tomohiro Ishizawa and Toru Danjo

National Research Institute for Earth Science and Disaster Resilience (NIED)
3-1 Tennodai, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-0006, Japan

Corresponding author

Received:
April 15, 2019
Accepted:
July 16, 2019
Published:
December 1, 2019
Keywords:
sediment disaster, heavy rainfall, rainfall index, estimated occurrence time, alert level
Abstract

The July 2018 heavy rain, which was actually a series of intermittent downpours instead of a short-term continuous heavy rainfall, triggered a large number of sediment disasters. This study was conducted to evaluate sediment disaster triggers. In the study, an interview-based survey was conducted on the occurrence times of the sediment disasters caused by the heavy rain and a rainfall analysis was completed using analyzed rainfall data from the Japan Meteorological Agency. These were followed by an analysis of estimated occurrence times of the sediment disasters and the temporal changes in rainfall indices determined through the rainfall analysis. An analysis of disasters at 36 sites examined for the purposes of this study showed that many occurred when the soil water index (SWI) during the study period (June 28, 2018, to the estimated occurrence time of a sediment disaster) was maximized. The analysis also indicated that slope failures tended to occur when hourly rainfall was relatively low and the SWI was high and debris flows occurred when the SWI was high and hourly rainfall was relatively high. Examination of the data, considering the alert level of the SWI, showed that in cases where the SWI continued to increase after exceeding the alert level, 75% of the sediment disasters analyzed occurred within approximately 19 h.

Cite this article as:
T. Ishizawa and T. Danjo, “Rainfall Indices at Estimated Occurrence Times of Sediment Disasters Triggered by the July 2018 Heavy Rainfall,” J. Disaster Res., Vol.14 No.9, pp. 1227-1235, 2019.
Data files:
References
  1. [1] Cabinet Office, “Report of damage caused by the July 2018 heavy rainfall,” http://www.bousai.go.jp/updates/h30typhoon7/pdf/310109_1700_h30typhoon7_01.pdf, 2019 (in Japanese) [accessed February 2, 2019]
  2. [2] K. Okada, Y. Makihara, A. Shimpo, K. Nagata, M. Kunitsugu, and K. Saito, “Soil water index,” Tenki, Vol.48, No.5, pp. 59-66, 2001 (in Japanese).
  3. [3] Y. Ishihara and S. Kobatake, “Runoff model for flood forecasting,” Bulletin of Disaster Prevention Research Institute, Kyoto University, Vol.29, No.1 pp. 27-43, 1979.
  4. [4] M. Sugawara, E. Ozaki, I. Watanabe, and Y. Katsuyama, “Tank model and its application to Bird Creek, Wollombi Brook, Bikin River, Kitsu River, Sanaga River and Nam Mune,” Res Note Natl Res Center Disaster Prev., No.11, pp. 1-64, 1974.
  5. [5] Japan Meteorological Agency, “Alarm and warning announcement standard list,” https://www.jma.go.jp/jma/kishou/know/kijun/index.html, 2019 (in Japanese) [accessed February 2, 2019]
  6. [6] Japan Meteorological Agency, “Analysis rainfall,” https://www.jma.go.jp/jma/kishou/know/kurashi/kaiseki.html,2019 (in Japanese) [accessed January 14, 2019]
  7. [7] Japan Meteorological Agency, “The Heavy Rain Event of July 2018,” https://www.jma.go.jp/jma/press/1807/09b/20180709_sankou.pdf, pp. 1-26, 2018 (in Japanese) [accessed September 12, 2018]

*This site is desgined based on HTML5 and CSS3 for modern browsers, e.g. Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Edge, Opera.

Last updated on Apr. 22, 2024