Published 2021
| Version v1
Publication
Flash Flood Events along theWest Mediterranean Coasts: Inundations of Urbanized Areas Conditioned by Anthropic Impacts
Contributors
Description
Flash floods represent one of the natural hazards that causes the greatest number of
victims in the Mediterranean area. These processes occur by short and intense rainfall affecting
limited areas of a few square kilometers, with rapid hydrological responses. Among the causes of
the flood frequency increase in the last decades are the effects of the urban expansion in areas of
fluvial pertinence and climatic change, namely the interaction between anthropogenic landforms
and hydro-geomorphological dynamics. In this paper the authors show a comparison between flood
events with very similar weather-hydrological characteristics and the ground effects occurred in
coastal areas of three regions located at the top of a triangle in the Ligurian Sea, namely Liguria,
Tuscany and Sardinia. With respect to the meteorological-hydrological hazard, it should be noted
that the events analyzed occurred during autumn, in the conditions of a storm system triggered
by cyclogenesis on the Genoa Gulf or by the extra-tropical cyclone Cleopatra. The "flash floods"
damage recorded in the inhabited areas is due to the vulnerability of the elements at risk in the
fluvio-coastal plains examined. There are numerous anthropogenic forcings that have influenced the
hydro-geomorphological dynamics and that have led to an increase in risk conditions
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- http://hdl.handle.net/11567/1048424
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/1048424
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- UNIGE