A compilation of data on European flash floods.

Eric Gaume; Valerie Bain; Pietro Bernardara; Olivier Newinger; Mihai Barbuc; Allen Bateman; Lotta Bla?kovicová; Günter Blöschl; Marco Borga; Alexandru Dumitrescu; Ioannis Daliakopoulos; Joachim Garcia; Anisoara Irimescu; Silvia Kohnova; Aristeidis Koutroulis; Lorenzo Marchi; Simona Matreata; Vicente Medina; Emanuele Preciso; Daniel Sempere-Torres; Gheorghe Stancalie; Jan Szolgay; Ioannis Tsanis; David Velasco; Alberto Viglione, 2009, A compilation of data on European flash floods., Journal of hydrology (Amst.) 367 (2009): 70–78. doi_10.1016/j.jhydrol.2008.12.028,
URL: http://www.cnr.it/prodotto/i/41639

Flash floods are one of the most significant natural hazards in Europe, causing serious risk to life and destruction of buildings and infrastructure. This type of flood, often affecting ungauged watersheds, remains nevertheless a poorly documented phenomenon. To address the gap in available information, and particularly to assess the possible ranges for peak discharges on watersheds with area smaller than 500 km2 and to describe the geography of the hazard across Europe, an intensive data compilation has been carried out for seven European hydrometeorological regions. This inventory is the first step towards an atlas of extreme flash floods in Europe. It contains over 550 documented events. This paper aims at presenting the data compilation strategy, the content of the elaborated data base and some preliminary data analysis results. The initial observations show that the most extreme flash floods are greater in magnitude in the Mediterranean countries than in the inner continental countries and that there is a strong seasonality to flash flood occurrence revealing different climatic forcing mechanisms in each region.

Data from https://intranet.cnr.it/people/