TY - JOUR
T1 - Flooding along oda river due to thewestern Japan heavy rain in 2018
AU - Nihei, Yasuo
AU - Shinohara, Asataro
AU - Ohta, Kaho
AU - Maeno, Shiro
AU - Akoh, Ryosuke
AU - Akamatsu, Yoshihisa
AU - Komuro, Takashi
AU - Kataoka, Tomoya
AU - Onomura, Shiho
AU - Kaneko, Ryo
N1 - Funding Information:
dation, and the Ministry of Education, Science, Sports and Culture, Grant-in-Aid Scientific Research (A).
Funding Information:
We are grateful to Nobuyuki Iwamae and Kazuteru Suzuki of the Technical Research Institute of Kajima Corporation, Takuya Kuriyama and Takahiro Shimizu of Nippon Koei Corporation, and Yoshimasa Mori of Mikuniya Corporation for their considerable efforts in conducting the field surveys. This study was partially supported by the River Fund Promotion Project of the River Foun-
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019, Fuji Technology Press. All rights reserved.
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - The heavy rain that hit Western Japan in July 2018 triggered the worst rain-related disaster in the Heisei era, with the total of dead and missing persons exceeding 230, mainly in the Hiroshima and Okayama Prefectures. At several locations along Oda River (of the Takahashi river system) and its tributaries, dikes were breached due to large-scale flood, leaving 51 persons dead. This paper aims to shed light on the scale of inundation along Oda River and its tributaries and identify the characteristics of and critical factors for human damage. Field surveys were conducted to measure flood marks in flooded areas and river channels, and gauge the extent of damage to people and property. The surveys found that a large area was inundated on the north side of Oda River, with an inundation depth exceeding 5 m for 1 km in the south-north direction and 3.5 km in the east-west direction, which made vertical evacuation of residents difficult. The findings that about 80%of the dead were found on the first floor of their houses, with those who had lived in a one-story house and those who had lived in a two-story house accounting for 50% each of the deceased, indicate how difficult even vertical evacuation was. The findings appear to be related to the considerable inundation depth and high rate of water level increase, along with the fact that the majority of the deceased were elderly people.
AB - The heavy rain that hit Western Japan in July 2018 triggered the worst rain-related disaster in the Heisei era, with the total of dead and missing persons exceeding 230, mainly in the Hiroshima and Okayama Prefectures. At several locations along Oda River (of the Takahashi river system) and its tributaries, dikes were breached due to large-scale flood, leaving 51 persons dead. This paper aims to shed light on the scale of inundation along Oda River and its tributaries and identify the characteristics of and critical factors for human damage. Field surveys were conducted to measure flood marks in flooded areas and river channels, and gauge the extent of damage to people and property. The surveys found that a large area was inundated on the north side of Oda River, with an inundation depth exceeding 5 m for 1 km in the south-north direction and 3.5 km in the east-west direction, which made vertical evacuation of residents difficult. The findings that about 80%of the dead were found on the first floor of their houses, with those who had lived in a one-story house and those who had lived in a two-story house accounting for 50% each of the deceased, indicate how difficult even vertical evacuation was. The findings appear to be related to the considerable inundation depth and high rate of water level increase, along with the fact that the majority of the deceased were elderly people.
KW - Flood
KW - Inundation
KW - Oda river
KW - Western Japan heavy rain
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U2 - 10.20965/jdr.2019.p0874
DO - 10.20965/jdr.2019.p0874
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85073534043
SN - 1881-2473
VL - 14
SP - 874
EP - 885
JO - Journal of Disaster Research
JF - Journal of Disaster Research
IS - 6
ER -