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Journal of Arid Land
Research Articles     
Mitigating the catastrophic impacts of torrential rivers in semi-arid environments: a case of the Gash River in eastern Sudan
Samir Mohammad Ali Alredaisy
Department of Geography, Faculty of Education, University of Khartoum, Omdurman 406, Sudan
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Abstract  The climatic, geomorphic, hydrologic and aquifer characteristics of the torrential Gash River across mountainous areas, in far eastern Sudan, were analyzed in order to mitigate its recurring catastrophic impacts. Hydrologic and climatic data and interpretation of Gash River satellite images were from relevant research works carried out in Gash Basin from 1985 to 2008. The results indicated that the total catchment area of Gash River is about 21,000 km2, and the basin area is 31,000 km2. The total length of Gash River is 450 km and the average slope is 200 cm/km. The width of the catchment varies from 30 m to 90 m and that of the basin is from 100 m to 800 m, and the course of the river is varied. During the period of 1980-2008, the mean annual rainfall was 250 mm and the mean annual discharge was 6.8 × 108 m3, and the flooding is approximately one time per 5 years. Torrential floods measured at Kassala town since 1907 showed that an absolute maximum discharge was 876 m3/s and a mean maximum discharge was 365 m3/s. These characteristics differ widely between catchment and basin areas. The author proposes that, by analyzing the climatic, geomorphic, hydrologic and aquifer characteristics of the Gash River and considering the role of community, a concise database could be provided to formulate the aquifer, geomorphic, hydrologic and climatic (AQUIGEOHYCLIM) regional approach to mitigate Gash River recurring catastrophic impacts.

Key wordsTaklimakan Desert      roughness      particle size      soil moisture content      soil wind erosion     
Received: 06 January 2011      Published: 07 September 2011
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Cite this article:

Samir Mohammad Ali Alredaisy. Mitigating the catastrophic impacts of torrential rivers in semi-arid environments: a case of the Gash River in eastern Sudan. Journal of Arid Land, 2011, 3(3): 174-183.

URL:

http://jal.xjegi.com/10.3724/SP.J.1227.2011.00174     OR     http://jal.xjegi.com/Y2011/V3/I3/174

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