Diahot River

Diahot is the longest river of New Caledonia, flowing for some 60 miles (100 kilometres).[1] It has a catchment area of 620 square kilometres and opens north-westward into the Baie d'Harcourt, flowing towards the northern point of the island along the western escarpment of the Mont Panié.[1][2] The village of Ouégoa lies on the river, not far from the mouth. The Diahot flows into the sea between the villages of Bwalayet and Pam, just south of Ile de Pam. It carries a substantial load of fine-grained sediment, which has increased over time due to felling and burning of forest and woodland vegetation and the introduction of grazing, creating soil erosion in the river system.[2]

Diahot River
Diahot river downstream Ouégoa
Location
CountryNew Caledonia
Physical characteristics
Mouth 
  location
Pacific Ocean
Discharge 
  average4 m3/s (140 cu ft/s)

Hydrology

General characteristics

Diahot has been monitored during a 43-year period between 1955 and 2008. The mouth is very influenced by tide so discharge is measured at Bondé Sainte Anne. At this place the basin area is 248 km².
Average discharge at this place is 4 m³.s−1. Because of daily flows variability and strong influence of flood events on average values, this quantity is very representative of what is commonly observed in streams. We, therefore, prefer the term median flow to characterize the normal flow of watercourses.
Median daily flow characterizes the flow value exceeded on average one day on two. Its value on Diahot is 2,3 m³.s−1.[3]

Diahot has seasonal flow variations strongly marked with floods during the wet season (December–April) and a large peak of 11 m³.s−1 in March.

Low water occur during the dry season (July to November) in summer (July to September), resulting in a decrease in average monthly flow to 1.1 m³.s−1 in September. Diahot watershed receives an average annual water blade precipitated of 1097mm while the runoff depth is 796mm. The interannual mean runoff coefficient is 50%.

Extreme Values

The annual flood discharge rises to 500 m³.s−1 and 10-year flood to 1906 m³.s−1.
The hundred-year flood is between 3375 m³.s−1 and 5400 m³.s−1 according to the assessments of flood maxima observed.
The maximum flood was observed during the tropical depression on February 6, 1972. Its flow was then measured at 3720 m³.s−1.
The small size of Caledonian watershed gives them a very important responsiveness to hazards. Concentration time that reflects duration between the maximum rain episode with the corresponding maximum throughput is only 4:25 for Diahot.

Values of low water can be very little with a median "low water characteristic discharge" 0.59 m³.s−1 and Centennial dry "low water characteristic discharge" 0.2 m³.s−1.

Annexes

Bibliography

gollark: It's nice to at least *try* and preserve people's privacy or whatever.
gollark: Apparently there's some giant price fixing thing with diamonds.
gollark: Clearly we need some kind of orbital telescope network, so Pluto can have StreetView. Or self-replicating Plutonian rovers.
gollark: I've mostly fixed the program now, so it appears to roughly match the Haskell version and produce nice images.
gollark: That's a gecko? I thought they were bigger.

References

  1. "Diahot River". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 9 June 2011.
  2. "The impacts of opencast mining in New Caledonia". The United Nations University. Archived from the original on 27 July 2011. Retrieved 9 June 2011.
  3. "Recueil des débits caractéristiques de la Nouvelle-Calédonie" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-10-30. Retrieved 2013-03-30.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.