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1 tability, of microplastic entrainment during floods.
2 factors, to the lack of a complete record of floods.
3 atures, heat waves, wildfires, droughts, and floods.
4 on and climate change have intensified urban floods.
5 nalyze atmospheric phenomena responsible for floods.
6 degree to which the nearby road segments are flooded.
7 ating sea-level rise, and increasing coastal flooding.
8 that MIS11 ice loss was coupled with marine flooding.
9 risk and an increased likelihood of fluvial flooding.
10 osure to some extent, and highly tolerant to flooding.
11 and, hence, combined stress by salinity and flooding.
12 otentially mobilize residual oil after water flooding.
13 people live on deltas and their exposure to flooding.
14 extreme water levels can double the odds of flooding.
15 n to mitigate the societal impacts of future flooding.
16 he global scale and responsive to periods of flooding.
17 better understanding of wave-driven nuisance flooding.
18 of which ~73% is caused by surface and river flooding.
19 o 60-fold for toxic equivalency (TEQ) during flooding.
20 lenges include rising temperatures and flash flooding.
22 rated by three mechanisms: (1) direct marine flooding, (2) storm-drain backflow, and (3) groundwater
23 me drought (2012), extreme precipitation and flood (2014) and moderate drought conditions (2013 and 2
24 g a giant tsunami that poured over the coast flooding 500 km alongshore the Mexican Pacific coast and
32 es and ecosystems from rising seas and storm flooding and influence the stability of barrier islands
33 999, causing catastrophic human impacts from flooding and leading to major alterations of water quali
34 effects of global warming, extreme weather, flooding and other consequences of climate change on mic
35 also explore the proton path using our water flooding and protein dipole Langevin dipole semimacrosco
36 avulsions in meandering rivers often produce flooding and sediment deposition during channel construc
39 ent of socio-economic vulnerability to flash floods and investigates the main characteristics of flas
44 arely witnessed, avulsions can cause massive floods, and over geologic time they create most of the f
50 However, atmospheric conditions leading to floods are not well understood due, among other factors,
51 feature large and increasing percentages of flooded area impacted simultaneously by the three flood
52 k, efficient and versatile model to identify flooded areas and the flood depth, using a hybrid of hyd
54 ences between the permanently and seasonally flooded areas caused by intra-annual water level fluctua
55 olic processes in permanently and seasonally flooded areas caused by water level fluctuations in a se
57 nce that several areas experience noticeable flooding at tide heights lower than existing flood thres
60 River deltas are especially vulnerable to flooding because of their low elevations and densely pop
63 ected to be a significant change in episodic flooding by the end of the century are identified and fo
65 tems and where intense rainfall and seasonal flooding can result in considerable aquatic C export (Si
67 pitation, resulting in localized droughts or flooding, can erode the base of freshwater food webs, wi
71 aper proposes a new framework for connecting flood changes to longitudinal variability in river conve
75 as other types of ecosystem services such as flood control and fish and wildlife habitat, should be c
76 is shown, that for the majority of analyzed floods, convectively coupled Kelvin waves, large scale p
80 s found in marginal-marine, storm- and river-flood deposits from the Middle Devonian Naranco Formatio
81 tile model to identify flooded areas and the flood depth, using a hybrid of hydraulic model and ML me
82 nts conducted in a natural field with 3-5 cm flooding depths, control and pretreated seeds of Ciheran
84 th increases and decreases in observed river flood discharges in the past five decades in Europe, whi
85 rojections, we find that the odds of extreme flooding double approximately every 5 years into the fut
87 the relationship between rain, extreme rain, flood, drought, and season (rainy vs. dry) and diarrheal
88 same sediment cores to evaluate the role of flooding, drought, and environmental degradation in Caho
91 G1 and AG2 QTLs associated with tolerance of flooding during germination, together with seed pre-trea
92 iver in Bangladesh and Northeast India often floods during the monsoon season, with catastrophic cons
94 mmends elevating existing houses to the Base Flood Elevation (the elevation of the 100-year flood) pl
95 arm and wet climate persisted even after the flooding ended, but its duration cannot be determined by
96 arch concentration decreased gradually under flooding especially in the tolerant checks and in AG1 +
97 monitoring (such as landslides, earthquakes, floods), especially those with meager occurrence probabi
98 pplications such as agricultural irrigation, flood event prediction, and drought and fire management.
100 exports) and regions where multiple extreme flood events can occur within a single year (e.g., the A
101 ienced three extreme tropical cyclone-driven flood events since 1999, causing catastrophic human impa
102 ominated by treated wastewater effluents and flood events transporting rural and urban non-point-sour
107 construct a fascinating timeline of episodic flooding events (ranging from 3.7 to 3.6 Ga to ca. 2.0 G
108 events and is known historically for cyclic flooding events and, within the last 20 years, for groun
114 two-leg breakthrough curves observed in core flood experiments; the normalized root-mean-square error
116 ults suggest that many published large-scale flood exposure estimates may require significant revisio
117 n operational remote sensing-based hurricane flood extent mapping method, examined potential water qu
119 Here a method is developed that identifies flooding extents and infrastructure vulnerabilities that
120 in Mn concentration were combined from three flooded-field experiments from the two sites and 3 years
121 rby Quelccaya ice core records indicate lake flooding followed a pronounced wet period beginning ~152
123 stories, including species restricted to non-flooded forests, are needed to further advance our under
124 es were sampled across a gradient of wetland flood frequency, applying both microscope-based morpholo
127 When such dams break, glacier lake outburst floods (GLOFs) can cause catastrophic societal and geomo
129 An improved understanding of changes in flood hazard and the underlying driving mechanisms is cr
130 igate the vulnerabilities of 1622 schools to flood hazard in Chaharmahal and Bakhtiari Province, Iran
132 e be insufficient to accurately characterise flood hazard risk in the region, both in the context of
133 ce of socio-economic vulnerability and flash flood hazard were investigated to identify the critical
134 vestigates the main characteristics of flash flood hazard, i.e. frequency, duration, severity, and ma
135 o would be valid for resource-management and flood-hazard-mitigation strategies for coastal communiti
137 Considering deep uncertainties surrounding flood hazards, the discount rate, the house lifetime, an
142 analyse how recent decades compare with the flood history of Europe, using a new database composed o
143 of natural hazard events (e.g., earthquakes, floods, hurricanes) on assets, people and society is of
145 low into a reservoir, allowing prediction of flood hydrographs up to two days in advance with continu
147 oncern in agricultural soils especially when flooding (hypoxic conditions) results from over irrigati
148 sing high-resolution historical data of road flooding in Harris County during Hurricane Harvey in 201
149 f increasing economic losses associated with flooding in many parts of the world, including Europe(2)
151 rts in-situ sedimentologic evidence of giant floods in Gale crater, Mars, during the Noachian Period.
153 lood propagation rate ([Formula: see text]), flood incubation rate ([Formula: see text]), and recover
154 2+), Mn(2+), Co(2+), or Zn(2+) Consequently, flooding infected cells with either Mn(2+) or Zn(2+) all
156 pproximately 7% of irrigated lands linked to flood irrigation and water storage practices supported 6
162 tance significantly, indicating that neither flooding itself, nor seawater sulfate, contributed great
163 M people live on land below projected annual flood levels for 2100, and up to 340 M for mid-century,
164 lobal population exposed to tropical cyclone flooding live on deltas, with 92% (28 million) in develo
165 microbial communities for bioremediation by flooding local populations with catabolic genes for petr
170 ed area impacted simultaneously by the three flood mechanisms, in which groundwater inundation and di
171 (extreme heat, fire, drought), hydrological (flooding), meteorological (hurricanes), and geophysical
173 ve vastly improved the precision of physical flood models, but translation into economic outputs requ
174 ections of future hazard from meteorological floods need to account for the extreme runoffs during la
176 per cent and 42 per cent of central European floods occurred in summer, respectively, compared with 5
177 of biological macromolecules, resulting in a flood of new molecular insights into protracted biologic
178 colation process in which the probability of flooding of a road segment depends on the degree to whic
179 ognize valleys, based on the pattern of lava flooding of tesserae margins by adjacent plains volcanis
184 at they emitted at 340 kg CH(4) d(-1) during flooded periods despite their substantially lower areal
186 ydrographs provide early warning of possible flooding prior to typhoon landfall, and then real-time u
187 d based on three macroscopic characteristics-flood propagation rate ([Formula: see text]), flood incu
188 rs, one often-forgotten driver of changes in flood properties is the variability of river conveyance
189 omic models, and find that mangroves provide flood protection benefits exceeding $US 65 billion per y
191 ribute to water security, energy supply, and flood protection but also fragment habitats of freshwate
192 socioeconomic impacts engendered by extreme floods provides a clear motivation for improved understa
195 tury will see significant changes to coastal flooding regimes (where present-day, extreme-but-rare ev
196 investigate the continuous shift in coastal flooding regimes by quantifying continuous rates of incr
199 e remarkability of flood events, measured by flood-related posts on social media, to estimate county-
201 ich groundwater inundation and direct marine flooding represent the most and least substantial single
205 ntally that approximately 80 water molecules flood rhodopsin upon light absorption to form a solvent-
207 The exceptional nature of the present-day flood-rich period calls for process-based tools for floo
211 t the past three decades were among the most flood-rich periods in Europe in the past 500 years, and
212 ars, and that this period differs from other flood-rich periods in terms of its extent, air temperatu
215 the future given projected changes to global flood risk and an increased likelihood of fluvial floodi
216 e potential for counteracting the increasing flood risk associated with sea-level rise and tidal and/
217 Here we analyze a case-study of riverine flood risk management using a multi-objective robust dec
220 osses has been called the main bottleneck in flood risk studies, an obstacle that may be remedied usi
221 edict an intensified monsoon and increase in flood risk with warming, robust baseline estimates of na
222 o revise and refine our estimation of future flood risk, this work highlights that multidriver attrib
225 ich period calls for process-based tools for flood-risk assessment that capture the physical mechanis
230 ion and recall for the spatial spread of the flooded roads at the majority of tested time intervals.
234 me floods regularly occur outside the normal flood season (e.g., the Sierra Nevada Mountains due to t
237 100 high-resolution (sub-annual) historical flood series based on documentary evidence covering all
239 aim of this paper is to present an efficient flood simulation framework that can be applied to large-
241 ne was the most persistent antibiotic in the flooded soil system (DT(50) = 77 days), followed by sulf
244 uld therefore, improve crop establishment in flooded soils and encourage large-scale adoption of dire
251 gravity and lower stomatal density, whereas flooded species had wider vessels, and higher leaf and x
253 Analysis of these maps at the end of various flooding stages revealed that the nanofluid invaded into
257 Typhoon-related precipitation can produce flooding that is often only predictable a few hours in a
259 dslides, avalanches, rock falls, and (flash) floods - that affect this area every year, damaging popu
260 es of agroecosystems (the upland, paddy, and flooded) that represent a gradient of stochastic versus
262 ity can also create conditions favorable for flooding, the enhanced precipitation related to Kelvin w
263 Annual exceedance frequencies of simulated flood thresholds are established using a statistical mod
264 on social media, to estimate county-specific flood thresholds for shoreline counties along the east c
265 e statistically-indistinguishable from minor flood thresholds of nearby tide gauges, we find evidence
268 decrease in microplastics abundance from the flood tide to the ebb tide was found, and a weak positiv
269 soil redox conditions change, that is, from flooding to drainage to reflooding, batch incubations an
270 ed to reevaluate main sources of SLR induced flooding to promote the development of effective flood m
271 ty could regulate ERF-VII levels and improve flood tolerance, but requires detailed structural inform
274 landslides, wildfires, land subsidence, and floods using machine learning models that include suppor
275 provide a useful approach for characterizing flood variability and for attributing climatic drivers o
279 approach can significantly improve existing flood warning systems and provide early warnings to rese
280 nhanced rainfall maps can be used to improve flood warnings and facilitate real-time operation of sto
281 puted tomography coupled with miniature core-flooding was used to evaluate their ability to enhance o
282 ethoxazole, trimethoprim) and incubated with flood water of different salt concentrations (0, 10, 20
283 ogical uncertainties to predicting droughts, floods, water resource availability, and ecosystem servi
284 of high-resolution raster datasets featuring flood-water depth generated by three mechanisms: (1) dir
285 The most likely mechanism that generated flood waters of this magnitude on a planet whose present
286 volution of the sediment bed surface and the flood wave characteristics controls the transition from
288 trates that catastrophic freshwater outburst floods were not a prerequisite for large perturbations.
289 A total of 68% of the global coastal area flooded will be caused by tide and storm events with 32%
295 the southwest U.S. experienced severe flash flooding with high magnitude, whereas the Northern Great
297 d roots, date palm seedlings were exposed to flooding with seawater and its major constituents under
298 circulation patterns associated with extreme floods with valuable insights for flood risk management.