Abstract
Understanding the frequency and causes of extreme events is crucial for environmental, social and economic protection and planning. In Australia this was never more apparent than January 2011 when widespread flooding across Queensland, New South Wales (NSW), and Victoria resulted in the loss of human lives and devastating impacts to infrastructure and local economies. However, understanding the interplay between the geomorphology of catchments and their hydrology remains poorly developed in floodplain planning guidelines. This paper seeks to explain spatial patterns of flood inundation in terms of downstream variations in channel morphometry; and to discuss the significance of these findings within the context of improving flood risk avoidance strategies and environmental outcomes for urban streams. A prominent characteristic of streams draining catchments in the Lockyer Valley south east Queensland and the Illawarra region of NSW, for example, are well developed macrochannels that have formed in mid-catchment zones. Detailed hydraulic modeling using HEC-RAS, HEC-GeoRAS and ArcGIS indicates that these macrochannels are scaled to accommodate high magnitude floods by operating as ‘bankfull’ channels during such events. In south east Queensland, locations where macrochannels debouch onto unconfined low gradient floodplains appear especially vulnerable to catastrophic flooding because of the efficient delivery and minimal attenuation of flood peaks generated in headwater catchments. Macrochannels and associated landforms can be clearly distinguished and mapped on fine-scale digital elevation models, offering the opportunity to integrate analyses of fluvial landforms and channel processes into hydraulic modeling studies, and ultimately, flood-risk avoidance strategies. Such an approach has the potential to improve on traditional flood risk avoidance methods that are focused primarily on design-flood heights by enabling the interpretation of hydraulic modeling outputs in the context of fluvial landforms that exert a significant control on flood behaviour.










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Acknowledgments
The Lockyer project is supported by Queensland’s Department of Science, Information Technology, Innovation and the Arts (DSITIA) as part of the Flood Recovery Project 2011 and an Australian Research Council Linkage Award (LP120200093). Greg Rogencamp (SKM) provided assistance with hydraulic model output used with permission from Lockyer Valley Regional Council (LVRC). Tim Pietsch performed the OSL analyses at Griffith University.
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Croke, J., Reinfelds, I., Thompson, C. et al. Macrochannels and their significance for flood-risk minimisation: examples from southeast Queensland and New South Wales, Australia. Stoch Environ Res Risk Assess 28, 99–112 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00477-013-0722-1
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00477-013-0722-1


