How are floods predicted?
Flood predictions require several types of data:
- The amount of rainfall occurring on a real-time basis.
- The rate of change in river stage on a real-time basis, which can help indicate the severity and immediacy of the threat.
- Knowledge about the type of storm producing the moisture, such as duration, intensity and areal extent, which can be valuable for determining possible severity of the flooding.
- Knowledge about the characteristics of a river's drainage basin, such as soil-moisture conditions, ground temperature, snowpack, topography, vegetation cover, and impermeable land area, which can help to predict how extensive and damaging a flood might become.
The National Weather Service (an agency within NOAA) collects and interprets rainfall data throughout the United States and issues flood watches and warnings as appropriate. They use statistical models that incorporate USGS streamflow data to try to predict the results of expected storms. See their National Water Prediction Service website which includes a selection for Long Range Flood Outlook in the right column.
The USGS maintains a network of streamflow-gaging stations throughout the country.
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Mapping a flood before it happens Mapping a flood before it happens
What's missing from flood forecasts? Maps—The only maps generally available today are maps used for planning. They are maps of theoretical floods, not maps of flooding forecast for an approaching storm. The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and the National Weather Service (NWS) have developed a way to bring flood forecasting and flood mapping together, producing flood maps for tomorrow's...
Authors
Joseph Jones
Large floods in the United States: where they happen and why Large floods in the United States: where they happen and why
The spatial distribution of large gaged floods throughout the United States shows that the locations of most of the largest flows are related to specific combinations of regional climatology, topography, and basin size. Key factors include the general northward trend of decreasing atmospheric moisture, proximity to oceanic moisture sources such as the Pacific Ocean and the Gulf of Mexico...
Authors
Jim E. O'Connor, John Costa
Related
Filter Total Items: 15
Mapping a flood before it happens Mapping a flood before it happens
What's missing from flood forecasts? Maps—The only maps generally available today are maps used for planning. They are maps of theoretical floods, not maps of flooding forecast for an approaching storm. The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and the National Weather Service (NWS) have developed a way to bring flood forecasting and flood mapping together, producing flood maps for tomorrow's...
Authors
Joseph Jones
Large floods in the United States: where they happen and why Large floods in the United States: where they happen and why
The spatial distribution of large gaged floods throughout the United States shows that the locations of most of the largest flows are related to specific combinations of regional climatology, topography, and basin size. Key factors include the general northward trend of decreasing atmospheric moisture, proximity to oceanic moisture sources such as the Pacific Ocean and the Gulf of Mexico...
Authors
Jim E. O'Connor, John Costa
Updated Date: August 14, 2025