Water Resources of the United States
Date: Mon, 08 Apr 2019 15:18:45 EDT
Summary: Flooding from snowmelt continues in the northern half of the state.
Flooding continues in northern Minnesota with the Red River of the North Basin receiving most of the attention. One or more gages have been at or above NWS flood stage since March 14. Currently, 20 gages are above minor flood stage, including 2 at major flood stage. Ice jams have been more frequent, widespread, and more severe than recent snowmelt events, causing unpredictable backwater flooding. Ice jams caused flow into an interbasin diversion and provisional peak stages of record at two streamgages. Provisional peak discharges have commonly had Annual Exceedance Probabilities (AEPs) of 0.2 to 0.1, but a few gages have had AEPs as low as 0.01. The first wave of Mississippi basin gages in southern Minnesota peaked, while flood forecasts have been issued for most gages in the northern half of Minnesota, including the Red River of the North. We are keeping an eye on a weather system due Wednesday-Thursday that could bring feet of snow or 2-4 inches or water-equivalent precipitation to southern Minnesota.
Today 4 teams (5 staff) are making flood and rating-gap measurements. Additionally, 5 staff are in the field updating firmware in 25 DCPs affected by the GPS clock-rollover issue. Since flooding began approximately 130 discharge measurements have been made in flooding parts of the state, and 4 secondary stage sensors have been installed at gages to improve data during ice-out or in-case ice and debris destroy orifice lines. Damages and losses due to ice-heave, ice flows, and ice jams, include crest-stage gages for peak confirmation, possibly an index-velocity meter, two bank-operated cableways, two DCPs and a gage battery. An ADCP and a field laptop were lost during discharge measurements.
USGS has been communicating on NWSChat, and directly with the USACE-St Paul District, MNDOT, local emergency managers and public works directors in communities of Marshall, Granite Falls, New Ulm, Mankato, Houston, and Jackson. The USACE asked USGS to make discharge measurements at the outlet of a Minnesota River flood structure that is under renovation. Scour soundings for a scour-critical bridge over the Mississippi at St Paul was performed as requested by MNDOT. Two interviews have been performed with Minnesota Public Radio concerning USGS flood preparations, monitoring and ice jams.