Published 1987
by Dept. of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey, Books and Open File Reports [distributor] in Raleigh, N. C, Denver, Colo .
Written in English
Edition Notes
Statement | by H. Curtis Gunter, Robert R. Mason, and Timothy C. Stamey ; prepared in cooperation with the North Carolina Department of Transportation, the North Carolina Department of Natural Resources and Community Development, and other state and federal agencies. |
Series | U.S. Geological water resources investigations report -- 87-4096., Water-resources investigations report -- 87-4096. |
Contributions | Mason, Robert R., Stamey, Timothy C., North Carolina. Dept. of Transportation., North Carolina. Dept. of Natural Resources and Community Development., Geological Survey (U.S.) |
The Physical Object | |
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Pagination | vii, 52 p. : |
Number of Pages | 52 |
ID Numbers | |
Open Library | OL17670863M |
Get this from a library! Magnitude and frequency of floods in rural and urban basins of North Carolina. [H Curtis Gunter; Robert R Mason; Timothy C Stamey; North Carolina. Department of Transportation.; North Carolina. Department of Natural Resources and Community Development.; Geological Survey (U.S.)]. The applicability of the nationwide urban flood relations in the Piedmont and Coastal Plain provinces is evaluated. Data for gaging stations on rural streams with 10 or more years of record were used in multiple linear regression analyses with basin and climatic variables, to derive regional relations for estimating flood discharges having recurrence intervals of 2- to years. ABSTRACT. A multistate approach was used to update methods for estimating the magnitude and frequency of floods in rural, ungaged basins in South Carolina, Georgia, and North Carolina that are not substantially affected by regulation, tidal fluctuations, or urban development. Year Published: Magnitude and Frequency of Rural Floods in the Southeastern United States, Volume 3, South Carolina. A multistate approach was used to update methods for estimating the magnitude and frequency of floods in rural, ungaged basins in South Carolina, Georgia, and North Carolina that are not substantially affected by regulation, tidal fluctuations, or urban development.
A multistate approach was used to update methods for estimating the magnitude and frequency of floods in rural, ungaged basins in South Carolina, Georgia, and North Carolina that are not substantially affected by regulation, tidal fluctuations, or urban development. Annual peak-flow data through September were analyzed for streamgaging stations having 10 or more years of data on rural. A statewide study was conducted to develop two methods for estimating the magnitude and frequency of floods in rural ungaged basins in North Carolina. Flood-frequency estimates for gaged sites in North Carolina were computed by fitting the annual peak flows for each site to a log- . Estimating the magnitude and frequency of floods in rural basins of North Carolina--revised by: Pope, Benjamin F. Published: () Techniques for estimating magnitude and frequency of floods on rural unregulated streams in New York State excluding Long Island / by: Zembrzuski, Thomas J.,, et al. Published: (). The Program T&M Chapter 6 of Book 4, The National Streamflow Statistics Program: A Computer Program for Estimating Streamflow Statistics for Ungaged Sites; Alabama. SIR , Magnitude and frequency of floods for urban streams in Alabama, ; SIR , Magnitude and Frequency of Floods in Alabama, ; SIR , Magnitude and Frequency of Floods on Small Rural .
The National Flood-Frequency Program—Methods for Estimating Flood Magnitude and Frequency in Rural and Urban Areas in South Carolina, U.S. Geological Survey Fact Sheet (Published ) By Robert R. Mason, Jr.; Luis A. Fuste; Jeffrey N. King; Wilbert O. Thomas, Jr. This report is available online in pdf format (1 MB): FS pdf. An investigation into the magnitude and frequency of floods in Washington State computed the annual exceedance probability (AEP) statistics for U.S. Geological Survey unregulated streamgages in and near the borders of Washington using the recorded annual peak flows through water year Techniques for Estimating Magnitude and Frequency of Floods for Urban and Small, Rural Basins in the Southeastern United States, Project Number: GC11MK00CH Project Chief: Toby Feaster Cooperator: South Carolina Department of Transportation Period of Project: May 3, to Decem THIS PROJECT HAS BEEN COMPLETED AND IS BEING ARCHIVED . The National Flood-Frequency Program--methods for estimating flood magnitude and frequency in rural and urban areas in Oklahoma, by W. R Bidlake () 1 edition published in in English and held by WorldCat member libraries worldwide.