Field-verified inventory of postfire hydrologic response for the 2020 CZU Lightning Complex, River, Camel, and Dolan Fires following a 26-29 January 2021 atmospheric river storm sequence
Dates
Publication Date
2023-06-26
Citation
Thomas, M.A., Kean, J.W., McCoy, S.W., Lindsay, D.N., Kostelnik, J., Cavagnaro, D.B., Rengers, F.K., East, A.E., Schwartz, J.Y., Smith, D., and Collins, B.D., 2023, Field-verified inventory of postfire hydrologic response for the 2020 CZU Lightning Complex, River, Camel, and Dolan Fires following a 26-29 January 2021 atmospheric river storm sequence: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P91O03Y7.
Summary
This data release is a field-verified inventory of postfire hydrologic response for the 2020 CZU (San Mateo–Santa Cruz Unit) Lightning Complex, River Fire, Camel Fire, and Dolan Fire following a 26-29 January 2021 atmospheric river storm sequence. Postfire hydrologic response types include a) no response, b) minor response, and c) major response. A “minor” response was deemed capable of impairing infrastructure functioning (e.g., deposition or erosion along a road that could be regraded by mechanized earth-moving equipment within a matter of hours) or causing minor bodily injury (e.g., abrasions, sprains, or broken bones). A “major” response was deemed capable of causing sustained infrastructure impairment (e.g., damage to roads requiring [...]
Summary
This data release is a field-verified inventory of postfire hydrologic response for the 2020 CZU (San Mateo–Santa Cruz Unit) Lightning Complex, River Fire, Camel Fire, and Dolan Fire following a 26-29 January 2021 atmospheric river storm sequence. Postfire hydrologic response types include a) no response, b) minor response, and c) major response. A “minor” response was deemed capable of impairing infrastructure functioning (e.g., deposition or erosion along a road that could be regraded by mechanized earth-moving equipment within a matter of hours) or causing minor bodily injury (e.g., abrasions, sprains, or broken bones). A “major” response was deemed capable of causing sustained infrastructure impairment (e.g., damage to roads requiring weeks or more of emergency repair efforts or residential structures made uninhabitable) or serious bodily injury (e.g., protracted disfigurement or death). The README.txt file describes the data fields for the “Inventory.csv” file. Fields with value “-9999” indicate that data are not available or do not exist.
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Inventory.csv
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README.txt
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Related External Resources
Type: Related Primary Publication
Thomas, M.A., Kean, J.W., McCoy, S.W. et al. Postfire hydrologic response along the Central California (USA) coast: insights for the emergency assessment of postfire debris-flow hazards. Landslides (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10346-023-02106-7.
This inventory was used to evaluate rainfall thresholds for post-fire debris flows under two scenarios: 1) minor and major responses are both considered positive cases and 2) only major responses are considered positive cases.