Floods
in Christchurch
A powerful
storm passed
over New Zealand’s South Island in March 2014 and brought
gale-force winds, torrential rains, and flooding to the city of
Christchurch. A total of 74 millimeters (3 inches) of rain fell on
March 4-5, according to MetService, New Zealand’s national
meteorological service. More than 100 homes flooded and more than
4,000 lost power around the country’s third most populous city.
The
surge of rainfall caused rivers—including the Waimakariri, Rakaia,
Heathcote, and Avon—to swell with what appeared to be sediment-rich
water. Skies had cleared enough by March 6, 2014, for the Moderate
Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS)
on NASA’s Aqua satellite
to acquire this image showing the aftermath. While it’s not
possible to make out patches of standing water in Christchurch, the
large amount of suspended
sediment flowing
out from the rivers made dark blue coastal waters appear aquamarine.
The lower image, acquired by MODIS on February 22, 2014, shows the
same area before the storm.
“When
it comes to identifying a sediment resuspension event, the only way
to be positive about the causes of the various colors in a satellite
image like this is to have someone sample the water, but to go from
dark to aquamarine over a few days over a large area with a strong
storm passing in between is almost as good as being there with
filters in hand,” noted Goddard Space Flight Center
oceanographer Norman
Kuring in
an email.
Christchuch
is located within a flood plain, occupying part of the large alluvial
fan of
the Waimakariri, thebraided-river just
north of the city. Like other braided rivers, the course of the
Waimakariri is dynamic. In the past, it has shifted as far south as
Lake Ellesmere, but levees now constrain the Waimakariri along the
northern edge of the fan.
Christchurch’s
flood control infrastructure has been under increasing pressure in
recent years because a series
of earthquakes struck
the area in 2010 and 2011. According to
University of Canterbury researchers, the quakes caused land in some
areas to drop, while narrowing and uplifting certain river channels.
The result is an increased risk of flooding.
- References and Related Reading
- Discover (2014, March 5) Storm Brings 100-year Flood to Christchurch, New Zealand. Accessed March 7, 2014.
- The National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (2014, March 7) NIWA wants your flood photos. Accessed March 7, 2014.
- University of Canterbury (2014, March 5) Christchurch experiences more flooding. Accessed March 7, 2014.
NASA
image courtesy Jeff Schmaltz, LANCE/EOSDIS
MODIS Rapid Response Team at
NASA GSFC. Caption by Adam Voiland, with information from Norman
Kuring.
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