Floods are common and costly natural disasters
When rivers overflow their banks, or flood,
they can cause damage to property and crops. Floods are common and costly
natural disasters. In the United States, the average annual cost of flood
damage is more than $2 billion. Each year about 100 people lose their
lives to floods.

Floods usually are local, short-lived
events that can happen suddenly, sometimes with little or no warning. They
usually are caused by intense storms that produce more runoff than an area
can store or a stream can carry within its normal channel. Rivers can also
flood when dams fail, when ice jams or landslides temporarily block a
channel, or when snow melts rapidly. In a broader sense, normally dry
lands can be flooded by high lake levels, by high tides, or by waves
driven ashore by strong winds. Small streams, particularly in the
Southwest, are subject to flash floods (very rapid increases in runoff),
which may last from a few minutes to a few hours. On larger streams,
floods usually last from several hours to a few days. A series of storms
might keep a river above flood stage (the water level at which a river
overflows its banks) for several weeks.
Weather patterns can determine when floods
occur
Floods can occur at any time, but weather
patterns have a strong influence on when and where floods happen.
Cyclones, or storms that bring moisture inland from the ocean, can cause
floods in the winter and early spring in the western United States.
Thunderstorms are relatively small but intense storms that can cause flash
floods in smaller streams in late summer and fall in the Southwest.
Frontal storms form at the front of large, moist air masses moving across
the country and can cause floods in the northern and eastern parts of the
United States during the winter and spring. Hurricanes are intense
tropical storms that can cause floods in the Southeast during the late
summer and fall.

Very large floods happen very seldom
The size, or magnitude, of a flood is
described by a term called recurrence interval. By studying a long period
of flow records for a stream, it is possible to estimate the size of a
flood that would, for example, have a 5-year recurrence interval (called a
5-year flood). A year flood is one that would occur, on the average, once
every five years. Although a 100-year flood is expected to happen only
once in a century, there is a 1 percent chance that a flood of that size
could happen during any year.
The magnitude of floods can be altered if
changes are made in a drainage basin. Harvesting timber or changing land
use from farmland to housing developments can cause the runoff to increase
and cause an increase in the magnitude of flooding. Building dams that
store water can reduce the magnitude of floods
Flood plains normally are dry
Flood plains are lands bordering rivers and
streams that normally are dry but are covered with water during floods.
Buildings or other structures placed in flood plains can be damaged by
floods. They also can change the pattern of water flow and increase
flooding and flood damage on adjacent property by blocking the flow of
water and increasing the width, depth, or velocity of flood waters.

Zoning restrictions limit flood damage

Flood-plain zoning, which places restrictions on the use of land on flood
plains, can reduce the cost of flood damage. Local governments may pass
laws that prevent uncontrolled building or development on flood plains to
limit flood risks and to protect nearby property. Landowners in areas that
adopt local ordinances or laws to limit development on flood plains can
purchase flood insurance to help cover the cost of damage from floods.
Dams and levees can reduce the risk of
floods
Flood-control dams have been built on many
streams and rivers to store storm runoff and reduce flooding downstream.
Although the same volume of water must eventually move down the river, the
peak flow (the largest rate of streamflow during a flood) can be reduced
by temporarily storing water and releasing it when river levels have
fallen. Levees are artificial river banks built to control the spread of
flood waters and to limit the amount of land covered by floods. Levees
provide protection from some floods but can be over-topped or eroded away
by large floods. For example, levees failed to protect vast areas in the
Mississippi and Missouri River valleys during the record-setting floods
that occurred in 1993.

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