Cedar River Basin Floods

Cedar River Basin Floods
Title Cedar River Basin Floods PDF eBook
Author Harlan H. Schwob
Publisher
Pages 72
Release 1963
Genre Floods
ISBN

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Flood Profiles Along the Cedar River, King County, Washington

Flood Profiles Along the Cedar River, King County, Washington
Title Flood Profiles Along the Cedar River, King County, Washington PDF eBook
Author O. C. Hettick
Publisher
Pages 56
Release 1979
Genre Flood control
ISBN

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Wetlands, Wildlife Habitat, and Flood Hazards in the Cedar River Basin, Iowa

Wetlands, Wildlife Habitat, and Flood Hazards in the Cedar River Basin, Iowa
Title Wetlands, Wildlife Habitat, and Flood Hazards in the Cedar River Basin, Iowa PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages 23
Release 2013
Genre Floods
ISBN

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Cedar River Flood Protection, Waterloo

Cedar River Flood Protection, Waterloo
Title Cedar River Flood Protection, Waterloo PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages 136
Release 1972
Genre
ISBN

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Summary of Floods in the United States During 1966

Summary of Floods in the United States During 1966
Title Summary of Floods in the United States During 1966 PDF eBook
Author Julian Ordean Rostvedt
Publisher
Pages 116
Release 1971
Genre Floods
ISBN

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The Great Flood of 1993 Post-flood Report

The Great Flood of 1993 Post-flood Report
Title The Great Flood of 1993 Post-flood Report PDF eBook
Author United States. Army. Corps of Engineers. North Central Division
Publisher
Pages 212
Release 1994
Genre Flood damage
ISBN

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The Flood of 1993 was an unusual and significant hydrometeorological event that devastated the Midwest. The 1993 was distinctive from all other record floods in terms of its magnitude, severity, damage and the season in which it occurred. The present report contains information about the flood and the general involvement of the Corps in the flood-affected areas. An appendix which provides detailed flood descriptions, data, and information on Corps flood control, flood fight and post flood activities is included for each of the district offices involved: Appendices A (St. Paul District) and Appendices B (Rock Island District) cover the Mississippi River basin above Lock and Dam no. 22; Appendix C (St. Louis District) concerns the Mississippi River basin below Lock and Dam no. 22; Appendix D (Omaha District) and Appendix E (Kansas City District) cover the Missouri River Basin.

Floods of May 30 to June 15, 2008, in the Iowa River and Cedar River Basins, Eastern Iowa

Floods of May 30 to June 15, 2008, in the Iowa River and Cedar River Basins, Eastern Iowa
Title Floods of May 30 to June 15, 2008, in the Iowa River and Cedar River Basins, Eastern Iowa PDF eBook
Author S. Mike Linhart
Publisher
Pages 99
Release 2010
Genre Cedar River (Minn. and Iowa)
ISBN 9781411329621

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As a result of prolonged and intense periods of rainfall in late May and early June, 2008, along with heavier than normal snowpack the previous winter, record flooding occurred in Iowa in the Iowa River and Cedar River Basins. The storms were part of an exceptionally wet period from May 29 through June 12, when an Iowa statewide average of 9.03 inches of rain fell; the normal statewide average for the same period is 2.45 inches. From May 29 to June 13, the 16-day rainfall totals recorded at rain gages in Iowa Falls and Clutier were 14.00 and 13.83 inches, respectively. Within the Iowa River Basin, peak discharges of 51,000 cubic feet per second (flood-probability estimate of 0.2 to 1 percent) at the 05453100 Iowa River at Marengo, Iowa streamflow-gaging station (streamgage) on June 12, and of 39,900 cubic feet per second (flood-probability estimate of 0.2 to 1 percent) at the 05453520 Iowa River below Coralville Dam near Coralville, Iowa streamgage on June 15 are the largest floods on record for those sites. A peak discharge of 41,100 cubic feet per second (flood-probability estimate of 0.2 to 1 percent) on June 15 at the 05454500 Iowa River at Iowa City, Iowa streamgage is the fourth highest on record, but is the largest flood since regulation by the Coralville Dam began in 1958. Within the Cedar River Basin, the May 30 to June 15, 2008, flood is the largest on record at all six streamgages in Iowa located on the mainstem of the Cedar River and at five streamgages located on the major tributaries. Flood-probability estimates for 10 of these 11 streamgages are less than 1 percent. Peak discharges of 112,000 cubic feet per second (flood-probability estimate of 0.2 to 1 percent) at the 05464000 Cedar River at Waterloo, Iowa streamgage on June 11 and of 140,000 cubic feet per second (flood-probability estimate of less than 0.2 percent) at the 05464500 Cedar River at Cedar Rapids, Iowa streamgage on June 13 are the largest floods on record for those sites. Downstream from the confluence of the Iowa and Cedar Rivers, the peak discharge of 188,000 cubic feet per second (flood-probability estimate of less than 0.2 percent) at the 05465500 Iowa River at Wapello, Iowa streamgage on June 14, 2008, is the largest flood on record in the Iowa River and Cedar River Basins since 1903. High-water marks were measured at 88 locations along the Iowa River between State Highway 99 near Oakville and U.S. Highway 69 in Belmond, a distance of 319 river miles. High-water marks were measured at 127 locations along the Cedar River between Fredonia near the mouth (confluence with the Iowa River) and Riverview Drive north of Charles City, a distance of 236 river miles. The high-water marks were used to develop flood profiles for the Iowa and Cedar River.