DEBRIS-FLOW TRIGGERS, THRESHOLDS, AND INITIATION MECHANISMS IN THE INTERMOUNTAIN WEST
Rainfall and snowmelt thresholds for triggering debris flows have been previously defined for some environments in the region. A rainfall threshold for the alpine zone in the Front Range of Colorado (Menounos, 1996) is defined as I=13.0D-0.65, where I = rainfall intensity (mm/hr) and D = rainfall duration (hrs). This threshold is poorly constrained at rainfall durations of less than 1 hr. A threshold for recently-burned areas in Colorado is well constrained for durations of less than one hour and takes the form I=7.0D-0.60 (Cannon et al., 2003). A study of snowmelt-triggered debris flows in Colorado, Utah, and Wyoming (Chleborad, 1998) showed that most debris flows occurred within 2 weeks after the first yearly occurrence of a six-day moving-average air temperature of 58° F (14.4° C).
Common mechanisms of debris-flow initiation in the region include: 1) erosion and entrainment of colluvium or channel material by runoff and rilling, 2) a firehose effect where concentrated runoff from bedrock mobilizes downslope material, and/or 3) mobilization from infiltration-triggered landslides. Field observations and published reports indicate that runoff processes dominate in sparsely vegetated, semi-arid areas south of about N39°. To better understand initiation processes and short-duration rainfall triggers for runoff debris-flows, three debris-flow basins in central Colorado were instrumented with event-recording rain gages and soil-moisture sensors. Two debris flows occurred in one of the basins in 2004, the first year of monitoring. Triggering rainfall for these two debris flows was 5 mm in 15 minutes (I = 20 mm/hr) and 15 mm in 23 minutes (I = 39 mm/hr). Theses values are less than the alpine threshold and at or above the threshold for burned areas.